Marriages: HUCKABY-GAVIT June 1930 - Submitted for the USGenWeb by Richard P. Sevier December 28, 2013 USGenWeb NOTICE: All documents placed in the USGenWeb remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, these documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. They may be used by non-commercial entities, when written permission is obtained from the contributor, so long as all notices and submitter information are included. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to other sites, requires permission from the contributors PRIOR to uploading to the other sites. ******************************************************************************************************************** Copyright. All rights reserved. ******************************************************************************************************************** Montgomery-Harris Wedding - Madison Parish, Louisiana From Madison Journal June 27, 1930 HUCKABY-GAVIT (The Brady (Texas) Standard) Miss Eulalia Gavit, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Gavit, and Mr. J. Wilson Huckaby of Tallulah, Louisiana, were married Wednesday morning at ten o'clock in an impressive wedding ceremony performed at the home of the bride by the Rev. Ben. H. Moore, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church here. As a pre-nuptial solo Mrs. J. lngram Broaddus of Brownwood, accompanied by Mrs. Ross Churchill, also of Brownwood, sang "I Love You Truly." The bride and groom entered to the strains of Mendelssohn's Wedding March and at the improvised altar of palms, artistically arranged against a background of fern, honeysuckle, and pink phlox with tall floor baskets of pink gladioli on either side, the beautiful double ring ceremony was read. Miss Lotena Onstatt of Dublin and William V. Gavit, brother of the bride, attended the bridal pair as maid-of-honor and best man. The bride was charming in a becoming creation of beige chiffon combined with silk lace and with accessories to match; she carried a lovely bouque of pink rosebuds intermingled with lace fern. A beautiful double-day frock of black silk and wool crepe with creme lace trimming harmonized with her hat was her going-away costume. The maid-of-honor was attractive attired in orchid chiffon and carried a bouquet of pink rosebuds and fern. The nuptial soloist wore a modish yellow silk crepe frock, and the accompanist's costume was a green flowered chiffon of be-coining design. Mr. and Mrs. Huckaby left after the wedding for a honeymoon trip to San Antonia, Houston and New Orleans. They plan to make their home at Tallulah where Mr. Huckaby is connected with the Tallulah State Bank & Trust Company. The bride is well known in Brady, having been reared here, and is popular among a wide circle of friends. She is a graduate of the College of Industrial Arts, Denton, and is a former student of Colorado Agricultural College. For the past four years she has been instructor in the home economics departments of the Brownwood and Beaumont school systems. Guests at the wedding included relatives and a few close friends. Among the out-of-town guests, other than those in the wedding party, were Mrs. Marshall Smith, Miss Frances Canon and A. Ross Churchill of Brownwood and Mrs. Roy Brown of Port Arthur.