Newspaper Reporting and Correspondence - novelonlinefull.com
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a brilliant success.
Fifty guests were present and the pres-
ents which they brought all but filled the
parlor. After the ceremony a seven-
course banquet was served until 11:30
o'clock. Miss Sadie Jones rendered "The
Rosary" to the accompaniment of Mr.
John Field.
The bride wore a gown of pink taffeta
and carried sweet peas. The bridesmaid,
Lily Swenk, was dressed in white muslin.
The groom and best man, Mr. Arthur
Howles, wore conventional black. Rev.
Stone of the First M. E. church officiated.
The groom is a promising young law-
yer of this city. His bride is one of the
city's leading young society woman, being
deeply interested in the Womans' Suf-
frage League. There marriage is the re-
sult of a love affair begun at the univer-
sity and is the cause of heart-felt congrat-
ulations from their friends. After a trip
to the Coast, the happy couple will reside
in this city.
VIII
"What we need in our universities are
sportsmen and not sports," said President
G. E. Gilbert of the Western University,
in the convocation address yesterday aft-
ernoon at four o'clock. "The sportsman
plays for the game, but the sport plays for
the victory."
The President continued, "Before the
battle, and during the battle, the
sportsman can be told from the sport."
It is the actions of the man, he
said, when he is in the test that determine
to which cla.s.s he belongs. The President
summarized the various college
activities and showed how the two
cla.s.ses of men appear in each different
activity. And in each, as the President
said, "you can tell the sportsman from the
sport."
"I think that this, the relation between
the sportsman and the sport, is the truest
a.n.a.logy that can be applied to human life.