CHESTER KYLE TAKES A BRIDE bel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. O. J. Gabel of De Kalb, Illinois, and Chester Dixon Kyle, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Kyle of New Castle, Pennsylvania on ~Saturâ€" day, August 14, at 8:30 o‘clock in the evening. The Rev. Russell W. Lambert performed the double ring candlelight seremony. Mr. Kyle, director of vocal music at the Highland Park high school, is also director of music at the Presâ€" byterian. church, His bride, who taught for two years in the Wilâ€" mette public schools as assistant art supervisor, will begin teaching this fall in the art department of the Highland Park high school. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a gown made with a bodice of imâ€" ported French lace with the neckâ€" line cut in the pattern of the lace. The long sleeves were pointed at the wrist. The full gathered skirt of slipper satin ended in a long train. Her fingertip veil of French illusion fell from a bonnet of lace which matched the bodice of her gown. The First Methodist church of De Kalb was the scene of the wedding of Miss Rachel Jean Gaâ€" The bride‘s sister, Miss Marâ€" jorie Gabel, attended as maid of honor, and Miss Louise Kyle, sisâ€" ter of the bridegroom, Miss Jean Crego of De Kalb, and Mrs. Willis of Wilmette were bridesâ€" maids. The four were gowned aâ€" like in pastel green. The bodices were of sheer lace with long sleeves and the skirts of matchâ€" ing color were of stiffened marâ€" quisette. They all carried white daisy bouquets tied with yellow satin ribbons. The coronets in their hair were alsoâ€"of white daisies. Carol Craig, niece of the bridegroom, acted as flower girl. Her floor length white stiffened marquisette dress was made with Page 4 By ALICE ZABEL a ruffle of organdy eyelet emâ€" broidery at the hemline. The daisy coronet in her hair was similar to the bridesmaids. She carried a basket of daisies which she scatâ€" tered before the bride. Dr. Fred W. Dixon of Cleveâ€" land, Ohio, uncle of the brideâ€" groom, served as best man. Ushâ€" ers were Wylie Craig of New Castle, brotherâ€"inâ€"law of the brideâ€" groom, Joseph Wagner of Lake Bluff mette Mrs. Russell W. Lambert, organâ€" ist, played a number of favorite selections of the bride and brideâ€" groom and the traditional wedâ€" ding march and recessional, Miss Alyce Nagel of Chicago, sorority sister of the bride, sang" "One Alone," "Love Can Be Dreamed," "Your Eyes Shine in my Own," "Because," and "Ich Liebe Dich." The ‘bride‘s mother wore a dinâ€" ner dress of hyacinth blue crepe and pink gladioli in her hair. The bridegroom‘s mother chose a pale rose sheer dinner dress compleâ€" mented by a shoulder corsage of lavenderâ€"blue gladioli. The bride is a graduate of Norâ€" thern Illinois State Teachers‘ colâ€" lege and Mr. Kyle is a graduate of Geneva college and the Oberâ€" lin Conservatory of Music .He reâ€" ceived his master‘s degree this summer from Northwestern uniâ€" versity. versity. 1 A very pretty wedding took A reception was held immediâ€" place on Saturday, August 14, in ately following the ceremony. One’"“. Covenant Methodist church, hundred and fifty attended. TheL Evanston, at 5 o‘clock in the eveâ€" bride and bridegroom cut the first|ning when Miss Margaret Anne piece of wedding cake with an ln-] Elmore became the bride of Dallas tique silver cake knife which has\Qverton Bossort. Dr. C. H. Newâ€" been used at wedding Cfl‘mo'l‘e"hum officiated. The bride is the for several generations in the| daughter of Mr. and Mirs. Edward church which the bridegroom‘s ) Burdette Elmore of 109 Elmwood family attends in Pennsylvania. drive, and the bridegroom is the Music at the reception Was proâ€"\son of the Lucien Bossorts of vided by a violin and piano. 1Tnble Grove, Ilinois. The bride‘s "going away" sumâ€" mer suit was of toast brown with dark brown accessories. On Monday Mr. and Mrs. Robâ€" ert K. Belt and son, Robert, who have spent the past momh motorâ€" ing in the west, and their other son, Bill, who vacationed at Teton Valley Ranch in Wyoming, reâ€" turned to their home at 1919 S. Sheridan road. ‘Their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Milner and son and daughter, Richard and Ann, brothâ€" erâ€"inâ€"law and sister of Mrs. Belt, who have been occupying their home in their absence, arrived home the following day from a Following a honeymoon in Verâ€" mont and New , Hampshire, Mr. Kyle and his bride will spend a few days in New Castle where a reception has been planned, beâ€" fore they return to Highland Park for the opening of school in the fall. They will reside in Ravinia. VISITORS FROM LEBANON and Charles Willis of Wilâ€" | _ The bride‘s mother wore a pale maize crepe dress and lavender ‘gl()ves to match her orchid corâ€" | sage. The bridegroom‘s mother | was in greyâ€"green crepe. Her corâ€" ‘sam- was also an orchid. " The ceremony was followed by a reception in the Pan Hellanic \room of the temple. After a norâ€" ‘thern honeymoon, Mr. Van Leeâ€" |uwen and his bride will reside in |Stevens Point, Wisconsin, where he will be employed as a reâ€"insurâ€" ance specialist with the Hardware | Mutual Insurance company. few days‘ stay with the John Kohâ€" lers of Kohler, Wisconsin. The Milners, who are visiting in the United States, spent seven weeks in England, before coming here. They plan to set sail for Alexanâ€" dria early in September. Their home is in Beirut, Lebanan. Best man was Stuart Mahurin of Henderson, and the ushers were John Jacobson of Mattoon, Illiâ€" nois, and Herman Landon of Chiâ€" cago, all members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. LOIS BOLLE, A BRIDE Miss Lois Mae Bolle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Bolle of 626 S. St. Johns avenue, beâ€" came the bride of William Harold Van Leeuwen V, son of Mr. L D. Melton of Henderson, Kenâ€" tucky, yesterday, August 18, in Levere Memorial temple of Sigma Alpha Epsilon in Evanston at 7:30 o‘clock im the evening. The bride was lovely in a white satin gown made with long sleeves and a tight bodice. The silk net yoke of the dress revealed a seed pearl design worked around the high round neckline, The full skirt had a long train. Her fingertip veil hung from a half halo of orâ€" ange blossoms. She carried a bouâ€" quet of white roses and gardenias. The bride was graduated in June from the University of Illiâ€" nois. She was president of Gamma Phi Beta, social sorority, and of Zeta Phi Eta, honorary speech sorority, and. member of Shiâ€"Ai and Mortar Board, honorary orâ€" ganizations. Mr. Van Leeuwen, was graduated from Barret high school in Henderson and with scholastic honors from the Uniâ€" versity of Illinois in June, 1947. He received his law degree from the university last Saturday., He is a member of Sigma Alpha‘Epsiâ€" lon, social fraternity, and of Phi Delta Phi, international legal fraâ€" ternity. He was president of the class of 1944 at the university and is a member of Skull and Crescent and MaWanDa, honorary organizations. He‘served as a first lieutenant during the war. Miss Elva Jane Bolie, sister of the bride, attended as maid of honor. She was gowned in light blue organdy and carried red roses. A short veil, matching her dregs, fell in back from the half halo of red roses which she wore in her hair. r $ On a week‘s fishing trip in norâ€" thern Wisconsin are Jack McHugh of 1356 Broadview avenue and his father, E. A. Mc Hugh of 318 Oakwood avenue. ON FISHING TRIP MARGARET ELMORE WEDS Gowned in white organdy, &-‘ bride was given in marriage by her father. The bodice of her dress was made with a low cut sealloped neckline. Lilies of the Valley were caught in the draped folds of both the bodice and the full skirt and train. The fingertip veil which was her mother‘s, hung from a halo of lilies of the valley. Lace worked into the veil was from the wedding ensemble of her maternal grandâ€" mother. She carried a fan shaped bouquet of small white f1 and sprays of ivy on a vm: background. Telephone Highland Park 2064 Maid of honor was Miss Helen Wohler of Davenport, lowa, and the bridesmaids were the Misses Gloria Holland of Highland Park and June Brown of Lincoln, Nebâ€" raska. Little Margaret Moon acted as flower girl. The white gowns of the attendants were made alike except for their sashes. The maid of honor wore a dark shade of ‘reenzbbon around her waist while bridesmaids‘ sashes were gold. The yellow daisies in their hair matched their bouquets, The flower girl, whose:â€"sash and hair bow _ were _ gold colored, also carried yellow daisies, Samuel Chatterton of Peoria, a student at Bradley college, served as best man. The ushers were Warâ€" ren Beck of Evanston, cousin of the bride, Ried Basinger and James Hammerberg of Oak Park and Bernard La Monte of Elmâ€" hurst. Howard Will of Highland Park sang "Because" and "Ich Liebe Dich." The bride‘s mother was in beige with a brown felt hat and accessâ€" ories. Her corsage was of small yellow flowers and paler yellow roses. The bridegroom‘s mother wore light blue and her corsage was of a gardenia and pink roses. Following a wedding trip to the Dells, Wisconsin, Mr. Bossort and his bride will reside in‘ West Branch, Iowa, where he is a colâ€" lege student. Mr. and Mrs, Robert J. Christoâ€" pher and son, Bob, and daughter, Julie, of 1940 Northmoor read reâ€" turned home last Tuesday eveâ€" ning from a three weeks‘ vacaâ€" tion spent in Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming and Utah. BACK HOME MARGARET HAM MARRIES The marriage of Miss Margaret Edith Ham, daughter of the Jesse E. Hams of 1035 Fort Sheridan avenue, to Bruce J. Johnson, son of the Marshall L. Johnsons of Oak Knoll Terrace, took place on Saturday, August 14, at 4 o‘clock in the afternoon at the Presbyterâ€" ian church. The Rev. Louis Sherâ€" win heard the exchange of nupâ€" tial vows,. The bride‘s father gave her in marriage. ‘This year‘s visitors at Illinois State Fair, Springfeld, August 13 to 22, will be able to ride from point to point in new type open air buses, being used for the fifst time on the fairgrounds. The four buses, similar to those used at A Century of Progress in Chicago, will carry 70 passengers mï¬xswmmmmm&awaMumhmuimwufl as NEW 7O0â€"PASSENGER OPEN AIR BUSES FOR STATE FAIR You are walking along the hall of an apartment house when you hear low moans coming through an open door. Looking in, you see a woman, her arm badly cut, semiâ€"conscious on the floor. Would you know what to do to help? Richard Kehm, Jr., installer for the Illinois Bell Teleâ€" 7 h phon:h(‘ompany. sA had at experiâ€" MA ie “l ence the other ‘ CC day. And because Q’ \\ he was trained to *A think straight and ‘% < AX act fast in emerâ€" P gencies, a woman‘s life was saved. The woman had slipped and fallen and her arm had crashed through a window, severing an artery. Kehm, in the buildâ€" ing to install a new telephone, sized up the situation swiftly. Usiag a large handâ€" ui) . t & @ . mX * zk Q, n _ NX ‘3‘\~ hy The handkerchief that saved a life T HE P R ESS faille and lace. The lace bodice of her dress had a round neckline and long lace sleeves, Her fingerâ€" tip veil fell from a crown of the same lace. The bouquet she carâ€" ried was of gardenias and a white orchid. Matron of honor, Mrs. Addison C. Davis of Glenview, (Patricia Blake) and the bridesmaids, Mrs. Richard Wallace (Joan Holt), Mrs. William G. Nusser of lIowa City and Miss Dorothy McIntosh of Evanston, were gowned alike in ice blue taffeta with matching hats and carried pink roses. The bouquet of the matron of honor, however, was of yellow roses. They all wore white lace mitts. Best man was Walter Oweiss, and the ushers were the brideâ€" groom‘s two brothers, Marshall, Jr. and Donald Johnson and the bride‘s brother, Rowland E. Ham. Mr. Rollin Pease of Tucson, Arizona, sang Elizabeth Barrett Browning‘s sonnet from "The Porâ€" tugese," and a composition of his own, dedicated to his wife. The bride‘s mother wore grey with a pink hat and accessories. Her corsage was of baby orchids. The bridegroom‘s mother was in beige with brown accessories, and her corsage was like that of the bride‘s mother. f A reception at the home of the bride‘s parents followed the cereâ€" mony. After a wedding trip to northern Michigan, the young couple will reside in Madison, Wisconsin, where Mr. Johnson will complete a course in pharmacy at the University of Wisconsin. The bride is a graduate of the Univerâ€" sity of lowa. CALIFORNIA VACATION Miss Norma Jane Langill of 437 Lincoln avenue is vacationing in The bride was gowned in white To Kehm it was an opportunity to use the knowledge of first aid he had acquired as a part of his televhone comâ€" pany {raining. Every televbone installer, lineman and repairman receives intenâ€" sive training in first aid that almost every day helps someone, somewhore. kerchief for a tourniâ€" quet, he tightened it with a twist of his screwâ€"driver, carried the woman to his servâ€" ice car and raced her to a hospital. She has since recovered, but i 5C doctors say if it hadn‘t been for Kehm‘s quick action, she would have died from Joss of blood in a few more minutes. Telephone folks are well known for their willingness to lend a hand. Inrr®ors Berr TeLEPHzoNE Com2any. California. She left on Friday and will be gone for two weeks. September 4 has been set as the wedding of Miss Nancy Nelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Nelson of 1916 Flora place and Chauncey Osborne Frisbie, III. The 8 p.m. ceremony will be solemnized at the Presbyterian church, the Rev. Louis Sherwin officiating. ~ The bride‘s sister, Jolene, will attend as maid of honor and anâ€" other sister, Virginia, and the Misses Georgia Braun of Fairâ€" mont, Minnesota, Esther Hayes and Barbara Jones: of Highland Park, and Mrs. Gunter Schwandt (Georgianna Frisbie) will be bridesmaids. WEDDING DATE SET Gordon Frisbie will serve his brother as best man. A reception at Michigan Shores, Wilmette, will follow the wedding. HOME FROM MICHIGAN Home from a week spent in Michigan are the E. L. Doroughs and son, Philip, off ‘1318 Wade street. Prior to her wedding on Saturâ€" day, Miss Margaret Ham was guest of honor on several occaaâ€" sions. Mrs. Marshall Johnson, Jr. of Chicago, honored the brideâ€"toâ€" be at a tea and kitchen shower at the home of the senior Johnsons on Oak Knoll terrace. Coâ€"hostesses at a luncheon and linen shower at the Herbert Holt home on Judson avenue, were Mrs. Holt and her BRIDAL PARTIES daughter, Mrs. Richard Wallace (Joan Holt) of N. Green Bay road. Miss Dorothy Mcintosh gave a buffet supper and .miscellaneous shower for Miss Ham, Norman Appleton of LA entertaind at the Spinst of N. St. Johns avenue the young coupte at t dinner following the reb Thursday, August 19, 1948 . Miss Nancy Nelson has also been feted on several occasions reâ€" cently. Her marriage to Chauncey O. Frisbie, III, will be an event of September 4. She and Miss Jean Easton, who was recently married, were guests of honor on two occaâ€" sions. The Misses Edith Allen and Esther Hayes were coâ€"hostesses to both girls at luncheon, and Miss Mary Mc Clure, herself to be a bride this month, gave a "brunch" in their honor. Mrs. Schuyler Watâ€" rous of Riverside feted Miss Nelâ€" n:a:d_llu;ni!c Clure at a "tin can" shower. * * Miss Nelson has also been enâ€" tertained at an afternoon party and kitchen shower by Mrs. John Kuiper and Miss Patricia Mangâ€" ler of Beverly Hills was a recent hostess at luncheon at her home for the brideâ€"toâ€"be In honor of Miss Betty Ralph, who will be united in marriage with W. Russell Ogden toâ€"morrow (Friday), a miscellaneous shower was recently given. Coâ€"hostesses were the Misses Doris Gieser and Marion Dahl. The evening party was given at the Gieser home on Mc Daniels avenue. About forty attended. VACATIONING IN THE WEST Bill Mc Culloch of 1358 Broadâ€" view avenue and three fraternity brothers are on a four weeks‘ vaâ€" cation in the west. They plan to return home about September 7. In Colorado Springs another fraâ€" ternity ‘brother plans to join them for the remainder of their trip to the west coast. Bill is a student at Northwestern university. BECKâ€"CANTAGALLO WEDDING On Saturday, August 14, Miss Dorothy Ann Beck, daughter of the Albert J. Becks of Wilmette and Joseph J. Cantagallo, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Cantagallo of 237 High street, Highwood, were uniâ€" ted in marriage at St. Joseph‘s church, Wilmette, at 10 o‘clock in the morning. Given in marriage by her father, the bride was gowned in white saâ€" tin made with a long train. Her fingertip veil hung from a headâ€" dress of orange blossoms. She carâ€" ried white roses. The bride‘s sister, Louise, was matron of honor. She was dressed in pink and carried pink carnaâ€" tions. The bridesmaids, the Misses Dorothy Blancher and Shirley Caâ€" bri, also carried pink carnations. Their gowns were blue. The atâ€" tendants all wore similar pink carnations in their hair. Oswoldo Mazzetti served the bridegroom as best man, and the ushers were the bride‘s brotherâ€" inâ€"law, Richard Richards, and Aldo Cabri. The bride‘s mother wore a flowâ€" ered grey dress with a corsage of red roses and white carnations. The bridegroom‘s mother, whose corsage was like that of the bride‘s mother, was in a black and white print dress. The reception was held at 8 o‘clock in the evening at the Highâ€" wood Community Center. About 300 attended. Henry Malizia and his daughter, Miss Alvina, of 224 Highwood avenue, Highwood, returned home on Tuesday from a three months‘ trip to Europe. Although most of the time was spent with Mr. Malâ€" izia‘s mother at her home in Rome, they also .:Shd in Venice, Pisa, Florence Vatican City, They returned aboard the USS Sobeski. HOME FROM EUROPEAN VISIT Mr. Malizia had not seen his mother since he left Italy forty years ago. He also saw two sisters, whom he had never met. Miss Rose Pastore of 246 Highâ€" wood avenue, Highwood, who sailed for Italy at the same time as the Malizias, has been visiting her family in Turin. She plans to return some time in September. WEEKâ€"END IN DAYTON Recently home from a weekâ€"end spent with friends in Dayton, Ohio, is Ray Sutinen of Ravinia. Several Highland Park relatives attended the wedding of Shirley Langill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood O. Langill of 416 Surf street, Chicago, and Arthur David ATTEND WEDDING TTE ‘Dok piace on Saturday, August 14, at the Fourth Presbyâ€" of at the Spinster dinner