REFUSAL AT ALTAR
BRIDEGROOM WHO SAID “NO.” EXPLANATIONS OF PARTIES. A young and charming bride, whose happiness was snatched from her on the steps of the altar was the central figure in a wedding drama at West Hendon Baptist Church, London, reports the Daily Express. The organ was hushed to silence. The ceremony had reached its crucial point. Before the altar, radiant in her white silk wedding gown, filmy veil and orange blossom, stood Miss Eva Mary Horton, aged’ twenty-two, of Mansfield, Nottinghamshire. Beside her was her bridegroom, Leslie Francis Hitching, aged twenty-one, of Sturgess Avenue, Hendon. “Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?” came the solemn question of the minister, the Rev. H. S. Rudge. In the quiet of the church all eyes were on the bridegroom, who stood silent with bowed head. Again came the question, again there was no answer. Then the bridegroom slowly shook his head, and the bride, tears staining the whiteness of her face, staggered back into her mother’s arms.
Half an hour later a motor-car drove up to the church with Miss Horton’s going-away costume. Tearfully she took off her bridal dress in an ante-room, and with her bridesmaids left the church. “Mr. Kitching and Miss Horton originally arranged to be married a fortnight ago,” said one of the perse; vs present, “but there was a hitch and the parties did not arrive at the church. The ceremony was rearranged to take place at 2.30 p.m. to-day. “Mrs. Kitching, the bridegroom’s mother, told me that she had impressed Leslie with the seriousness of the undertaking and urged him to be quite sure he wanted to go on with it. “He replied that while he wanted to get married, he was anxious about having to leave home. “Another worry was that he did not feel he could provide for his intended wife as well as he wished. But he apparently had finally made up his mind to carry on.” f Mr. Kitching, seen at his mother s home at Sturgess Avenue said: “There was a hitch over certain matters which I cannot discuss at present, and it is probable that I shall arrange a meeting with Miss Horton shortly. She has gone back to her parents’ home at Mansfield. I cannot make any comment about my action, but I hope that Miss Horton and I will be able to come to an agreement very soon. I think there is every prospect that we may. Miss Horton said: “When I saw Mr. Kitching to-day and asked him for an explanation, he answered, ‘I don’t know what made me say what I did.’ •
“I asked him if his affections were engaged elsewhere, and his answer was ‘No.’ He could not give me any reason, and I cannot think of any to account for it.”
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Bibliographic details
Taranaki Daily News, 1 June 1935, Page 7
Word Count
471REFUSAL AT ALTAR Taranaki Daily News, 1 June 1935, Page 7
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