======================================================================= USGenWeb NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free Information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. ======================================================================= Tulsa Daily World. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 15, 1911 Society The wedding of Mr. C.S. Bruce, of Port Arthur, Tex., and Miss Julia Giddings of Tulsa, Okla., will take place Oct. 25, 1911. Tulsa Daily World. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1911 Miss Giddings Weds Wednesday Tulsa will be the scene of a brilliant wedding next Wednesday evening when Miss Julia Elizabeth Giddings, a prominent and popular young society girl of this place, who one night last spring rode her spirited saddle horse into a Main street drug store on a wager, will be united in holly wedlock with Mr. Cleve F. Bruce of Port Arthur, Tex., and former assistant manager of the Tulsa Street Railway company. The wedding invitations have been issued by Miss Gidding’s aunt, Miss Jennie Carpenter Lyman. Tulsa Daily World. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1911 Tuesday evening at the pretty home of Miss Jennie C. Lyman, on South Denver avenue, in the presence of about fifty of their most intimate friends, occurred the wedding of Miss Julita Elizabeth Giddings, of Tulsa, and Mr. Cleves Fisher Bruce, of Port Arthur, Texas. To the beautiful strains of Lohengrin’s Wedding March, played by Mrs. Alvin C. Johnson, promptly at 8:30 o’clock, Miss Giddings, attended by Miss Bess Ball, as maid of honor, and Mr. Bruce with Mr. Arthur Hendron as his best man, approached the wedding altar and were made man and wife, Rev. C.W. Kerr, pastor of the Presbyterian church performing the ceremony. The bride’s wedding gown a beautiful creation of white crepe meteor, and she carried a bouquet of white colonial roses. Her going-away dress was blue tailored broadcloth with hat to match and brown shoes and gloves. The decorations throughout the house were beautiful, the parlors being a regular bower of palms, ferns, smilax and gorgeous white chrysanthemums, while in the dining room white Killarney roses and smilax. Immediately after the ceremony, a reception was tendered the guests, during which simple refreshments consisting of ice cream molded in the form of chrysanthemums and cake were served. Mrs. Bruce has been one of Tulsa’s most popular society girls for some time and will be greatly missed from their midst. Mr. Bruce is superintendent of the street railway system in Port Arthur, Tex., and has many friends both there and in Tulsa, having lived in the latter place before going to Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce left on the 11:20 train for Kansas City, Mo. They will be at home to their friends in Port Arthur, Tex., after the 15th of November. The out of town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. A.M. Bruce, of Muskogee, parents of the groom, Miss V. Torbet of Muskogee, and Miss Hall of Chicago, Ill. Two Licenses Issued Two marriage licenses were issued yesterday by the clerk of the county court. Those desirous of being wed were Sandy Johnson, 40 and Mary Davis, 20, both of Sapulpa, and Cleve F. Bruce, 28, to Julia E. Giddings, 25, of Tulsa.