Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 201, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 August 1913 — Bride Aboard, His Way to Her. on Ship Barred [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Bride Aboard, His Way to Her. on Ship Barred

NSW YORK. —"Borders is borders,” said the sailor on guard at the gangplank of the steamship Carmania the other forenoon when the whistle was blowing its final warning and the ship was ready to turn on steam, "and, you don’t go aboard without your ticket, young fellw ” The young man to whom the sailor addressed himself was tall, athletic and very much excited. He had left his bride of a day aboard and had gone on the pier at the last minute to see a belated friend. Now he was being held back when he tried again to board the vessel. "Where's your ticket?” growled the sailorman. "My sweetheart has it —that is, I mean to say my wife has it,” replied the excited bridegroom. Sailors and longshbremen were the gangplank. .. ...v. for a moment the guard turned away his bead, but that was enopgh. ■ tor, with a twist, the strong young

man» overbalanced the sailor and dashed up the gangplank as it swung toose at the scupper end. The sailor caught at him, but succeeded only in knocking off the bridegroom's straw hat, which fell into the water. The newlywed jumped upon the deck and was enthusiastically taken to the arms, of his bride, while he and she hurled cross words at the guard who had been trying to do his duty. The newlywed was Charles Moon field Storey, son pf.a Boston lawyer, who married, at Chestnut Hills, Miss Susan Sweetser of that Hub CltJ suburb.