OCR Text |
Show MIXED COMPANY AT THIS WEDDING Laj Sister of Convenl Marries Proprietor Gantbling House. new York Oct Bl. There i utile niaterinl Just now out of which to compile com-pile n social calendar! if events In town m-e mken Into consideration. Society Is in the suburbs. The frequent t r 1 1 s to town nm mere incidents. It Is tiu- that a tew houses are open and there have been some charming little dinners nnd poni" Jolly parties to the pluy. The autumn weddings have been many anil brilliant nnd the month of November gives promise of being filled with these Joyous happenings. The. postponement of the departure of the Duchess f Marlborough gave additional scope tot entertalnli The Sanson Ht Tuxedo this fnll has has been unusually k- There are ninny debutants in the Tuxedo set this e,-r. Among: them ure Miss Eleanor Mortimer, a younger Miss Kane, Miss Gilbert and mis FrelJnghuysen. Hunt Club3 Successful. Election day Is to brlnjr ns S social diversion the pony races nnd the steeplechase al ih- farm or Gould itrnkaw nt Qreal Neck, I"hk Island it may he observed In passing thnt mver before In America hnve the hunt club been ho successful and populur as this Foason. Not lo ride iirgin s nni unf'i h-buiable, h-buiable, and as well b out of the world, ns out of fashion. The largest huntlnc ..ir.l of the vi'.nr w ns rerently held around Hempstead by the .Mc:i- dow Brook Hunt club, of which Peter F. Collier Is the riiusi.T of fOX hounds. Eight meets were held, i wo with the KiiRllsh fox hounds, four v.ith th'-American th'-American puck belonging to W. L. Varner of Arkansas, and two drag hunts with the English hounds. Runs Are Exciting-. All the meets have been largely attended, at-tended, the best riders In the district putting In :ui appearnnip. The runs proved unusually exciting, each day several foxes being Started, giving the riders excellent sporl long runs and stiff jumps Incidentally it maj b said thut upon each day but one the quarry, after a tantalizing chase, os-aped os-aped Fine s;ort was had, hovviv r. even though the foxes down Jericho way are not as yet seriously alarmed Odd Mixture in Marriage. There was an odd mixture of Ihe sporting set and the social set ut the ''invent ,jf nur L.adj of th- Cenacle at the wedding Of Mr ;ind Mrs. John F. oilve, recently Immediately after the w .-ddliig Mi . and Mrs Hlvy sulh 1 on the Baltic. Mr Olive Is the pn il-dent il-dent of the Dade county Guarantee ami Trust company and proprietor of tt gambling casino at Miami. Fla. Tho bride wns Miss Marv Nlvera Abrams, great grand-daughter of Bishop Andrews, An-drews, late bishop of the Protestant Episcopal dio' ' ,,f Albany Having renounced th- a ngellcan faith she hs been for some time a ward of Archbishop Arch-bishop Farley, and until her marriage she was u. lay sister at the convtnt, where thirteen professed nuns and len lay sisters are in retreat. Mot nt Miami Miss Abrams met Mr. Olive al Miami, where she and her mother spent tie winter the last two winters, and the marriage ceremony, which was performed per-formed by the Rev Father M.ihan. vv is the first to be celebrated within the new convent. The bride was given avgy by her brother. Warren Duly was the best man nnd the bridesmaid was Miss Daly. The Miami casino Is as well-Know i to the winter colony Of Florida as the casino at Palm Beach or that of Monte '.ii in tu th- sojourners In the Reviera The mingling of tho friends of the bride and the bridegroom at the wedding, wed-ding, the one set having moved In an ecclesiastical sphere and the other ,.om-Ing ,.om-Ing from B sporting circle, was le-garded le-garded as In striking contrast. Among the goml f i lends of th s bridegroom were "LioM" Ludlum and "Eddie" Buie Well-Known Spoit. No member of the gambling fraternl- tj was ever better known In the 'White Light District" thgn John Frederick Olive. He is not a .voting man, but he Is extremely well preserve.). He ran a gambling house In company with "lxu" Ludlum until the police Closed it. Then Mi Olive decided to transfer the scene of his activities to Florida, This his second marriage. The father of the Hist Mrs OllVC, who died, was a minister. min-ister. Mr. and Mrs. Olive will spend their honeymoon In a two months' tour of England and the continent. Field for Missionai ies. "i know that i have found more 'foreign 'for-eign missionary work" right heie in New York than 1 could fine in ?ny other country." 9o Miss Floreni e Stei i tin probation officer or the Morrlsnnla Police court, told th commission appointed bv Oo Higins to investigate the probation officers of the CltS and State courts. Mis-s steviis is the daughter of an ofll-cer ofll-cer of thl HarKm I'oiic voint. She said that -he bad Hdidl-l t(ll- f ) , - (-.,, .s With the Intention of beco nlng a foreign for-eign missionary, buc decided mat home mission work wan iliinnr. Miss Alice Sm 1 1 ii of forkvllle court, Bald tha! John D Rockefeller, Ji pays her al-ary, al-ary, and thai Mrs Phelps l odce audi other charitable women ii?lv her In hei work. Mrs. Julia Coleman, probation of liter In the Tunihs, declared tliat a .-nli-al ljui-au for th- 'X'hunr;- ut' Ideas -MLun probationary officers liei i in Ntv. York would help them ipreatly. Mrs. Coleman, who has been In ch&r-luil.le ch&r-luil.le v. ork all h'-i life. :w.l i that . lu -i men have been put In her harbre in probation she hu found oftenesl that tha women of the family were to blame. Mi al -!-tal'. b'lOinei-H hic.f u.i been bIom in si izr- the opportunities for sui-- i i-Msiul opi-i atl pti.h afforded hy I h" Pennsylvania railroad's expenditure of minions in bringing New Jersey and Lor.j; Hli'inl suburbs wllhln eusy ami i nick access to ihe hear) of 1 1 - i ity h the tunnels now being built under- thf ..ith and Easl rivers Systematii and extensive advertising i . r lb- aih aniac;' s uf the Utile tow ns on tn KniiK Island railroad has ir-sultt-d Ic unprecedented activity In real estate and bulldlna In Queen's county. Fine Names for Cornfields. I.B-l fall the Bronx occupied the n I -tentlon Of Speculators and Investors Now the man who desires a home Bite or who would make enormous profits by purchasing early Is directed to Inig Inland All of the spectacular methods to amuse Interest In the lots offered for sah are employed by corporations nnd Indhlduals vho have divided black, H ant spin es and cornfields into resi- I n .- lols. The newspapers are filled with the advertisements of 'he euphemlsth names that have been given to the old potato patches It costs nothing to go to a dozen places on the Long Island mad Agi-iits of numerous land com- I P'.nles are stationed at the Thirty-1 fourth street ferry and tickets may be had for th- asking Demand Is Great. Etat'dly a day passes without one or more auction sales at which rcfreoh-ments rcfreoh-ments are served and brass bands udd to the delectation of the occasion The demand for lots, the value of whil h will surely be enhanced when thr Pennsylvania tunnel is completed nnd electric trains run from these suburban towns to Herald square, has fully met the c poctatlons of the land companies, .Speculation and Investment Is proceeding proceed-ing on an enormous scale while building build-ing is so active that It Is difficult to find artisans enough to put up the houses. To urgo agalnet mixed marriage a w ii as to protect the ancient faith Il-li.u organization has been formed, on direct Impetus inwards its existence exist-ence having been. It Is said, the ,,,ar ilagi of Rose Harriet Paotor. who as Ot Hebrew faith, to J. O. Phelps ytok s a Christian The papers of Incorporation Incorpora-tion have Just been Mled at Albany. Tin i.ew society is to be known as the Dr. Hiiy.) Publication society. Che movement Is due to tlie far ti it ill- orthodox are to some extent falling away from the talth. and the subject is to conduct a propaganda foi the integrity in-tegrity of the Jewish religion through pamphlets and publications. The papers pa-pers of Incorporation taie thut the purpose is to "publish, disseminate ami distribute Jewish pamphlets for th-purpose th-purpose of giving Instruction i,, Irn-best Irn-best forms of Jewish Ideals, which ill be published end sold to th- people al popular pikes In the Interest of pro-mot pro-mot i ng .1 udalsm " |