WEDDING.
LOBB—HAREOn Wednesday, January 4, a very pretty wedding was solemnised at St. Mary’s Church, New Plymouth, the officiating clergy being Archdeacon Evans and the Rev. F. G. Harvie, when Miss Winnie Kathleen, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hare, of Omata, and late of Wairarapa, was married to Mr. Harold Lobb, fifth son oi Mrs. S. A. and the late Mr. Joseph Lobb, of Westown, New Plymouth. The bride, who entered the church on the arm of her father, was attired in a robe of ivory and satin charmeuse, the front panel and sleeves were of silk net heavily embroidered in silver. The side panels of the skirt were made with looped effect and the train which hung from the shoulders was looped in at the waist afid lined with silk tissue. The veil, which was worn over the face, was kept in place by strings anira coronet of pearls and a little orange blossom. The bride carried a shower bouquet of roses, sweet peas, spirca and maiden-hair fern. She was attended by Miss Irene Death, of Auckland, as chief bridesmaid, wearing a frock of lemon crepe de chine prettily worked in nattier blue and a dainty hat of lemon with touches of blue and silver, her bouquet being of lemon aquilegias and delphinium ‘ blue butterfly. Miss Joyce Hare, of Wellington, niece of the bride, acted as bridesmaid, and was dressed in shell pink crepe de chine, worked in nattier, with a black georgette hat, trimmed with tiny posies of pink and blue, and carried a bouquet of heliotrope thalictrum and sweet paes with touches of {link. Two little train-bearers, Miss Margery Kilmister, of Hunterville, and Noela Russell, of Masterton, nieces of the bride, looked very pretty in frocks of heliotrope crepe de chine, with accordeon-pleated skirts and frills at neck and sleeves finished with shell pink georgette sashes. Their hats, which were of black georgette and lace, were trimmed with tiny posies of heliotrope and pink. They carried posies of pink sweet peas and pink streamers. The bridegroom was attended by Mr. Selby Tancred as best man, and his brother, Mr. Douglas Lobb, as groomsman. The bridegroom’s present to the bride was a black fox necklet, the bride’s gift to the bridegroom being a gold watch. Miss Death received a white xylonite dressing-set, the second bridesmaid a gold brooch, and the little girls gold kewpie brooches. Mr. Renaud presided at the organ.
After the ceremony a reception was held at Kawaroa Bungalow, which had been prettily decorated by friends of the bride. The usual toasts were honored, about 90 guests being present. Mr. and Mrs. Lobb left by car en route for Rotorua and Auckland, the latter travelling in a puttycolored costume with nigger-brown stripes and a nigger-brown toque trimmed with tulle aeroplane bows and pink geraniums, the presents received were costly and numerous, including several cheques, testifying to the popularity of the happy couple.
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Taranaki Daily News, 9 January 1922, Page 6
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487WEDDING. Taranaki Daily News, 9 January 1922, Page 6
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