Jasper County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 April 1911 — Woman’s World [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Woman’s World
The Bryans’ Younger Daughter Expected to Be a June Bride.
When Jane comes around with Its roses there will be another wedding in the family of the great commoner, and Lincoln, Neb., is delighted, since it means the keeping of the younger of the popular Bryan girls with them. Perhaps the Bryans are delighted, too, for Miss Grace, the youngest child, is to marry no stranger, but a young man who has always been known to them and whose parents have long been their friends. Richard Lewis Hargreaves is the prospective bridegroom. The young man is only a few years older than the bride to be. who is about nineteen.
Presumably the wedding will take placeat Fairview, the family home on the outskirts of Lincoln, or else In one of the local churches. Miss Grace Bryan resembles her mother in appearance and has the same charm of face and manner. That she is clever goes without saying, for the children of such parents could be nothing else. Her special talent Is music, as that of her elder sister is literature.
The Bryan girls have always been great favorites with the American people. Like their mother, they are simple and democratic and put on no undue airs, although their father’s great position in the world would excuse them for so doing. When Miss Ruth Bryan was married to W. H. Leavitt in 1908 the marriage could scarcely have been a matter of more public Interest bad her father been president. Every one felt sorry for her, and particularly for her parents, when the marriage turned out so unhappily. Certainly the younger daughter will have the best wishes of the American people in her new life.
Although so prominent, the Bryans have always insisted on keeping the particulars of their private life from the public. That their daughters are good looking, healthy and wholesome American girls is obvious. They are well educated without being representatives of the modern higher education for women. Miss Grace attended a | school for girls in Virginia and afterward studied in Germany. She is fond of dogs and horses, a lover of the outdoor life and in most respects a thor- | oughly typical American girl. She is | the last of the three Bryan children to marry, her brother, William J . Jr., having married Miss Helen Berger, daughter of a wealthy Milwaukee business man, about two years ago. On their recent return from Europe the Bryans brought many handsome things for their daughter’s trousseau.
MISS GRACE BRYAN.
