FOR 18 LONG YEARS HE WAITED, BUT FINALLY WON HIS BRIDE
A Romance in Barnum - Miss Nellie Rial Marries Man
of Her Choice, After Wait
of Eighteen Years
(By C.R. Spencer)
Barnum, Iowa, February 17, 1904. - After eighteen years
of delays resulting
from the pranks of a most cruel and adverse fate,
Miss Ellen Rial of this
city, was married on Tuesday, February 16, to James
Horty of Iowa City. The
ceremony so long deferred took place at St. Joseph's
church at 9:00 a.m. It
was conducted by Father Helan, who celebrated High
Mass as part of the
ceremony. The bride was attended by Miss Josie
Rial as maid of honor and
Richard Burk acted as best man to the groom.
The wedding was witnessed only
by a few of the nearest friends and relatives.
The bridal party proceeded
from the church to the home of the bride's mother
where the sumptuous wedding
feast was spread. Mr. and Mrs. Horty will make
their home in Iowa City and
laden with beautiful and costly wedding presents,
they departed for that
place on the 3:00 o'clock train.
A little more than eighteen years ago Miss Rial, then
a young girl, was
employed at Iowa City. While there she met Mr.
Horty and acquaintance soon
developing into love, they became engaged. Miss
Rial soon returned home and
the lovers were forced to content themselves with
keeping up a lively
correspondence. Shortly, however, two or three
letters went astray in the
mail, a misunderstanding arose, and communication
ceased and the incident
seemed closed.
Several years elapsed in which no word passed between
the two. Finally Miss
Rial received a letter and the correspondence was
resumed only to be broken
off as before thru a prank of fate. This time
both parties to the romance
gave up all hope of a marriage. The years and
months sped by without a word.
Last August, eighteen years after their first meeting.
Miss Rial received a
letter addressed in the old familiar hand. Her
lover of long ago had written
her.
This time the correspondence was uninterrupted and
a little more than a week
ago Mr. Horty wrote that he intended coming to see
his old sweetheart. He
arrived in Barnum the following (last) Saturday.
Deciding to risk no more
delay, the two arranged at once to be married the
following Tuesday, and
friends and relatives were stunned by the announcement
from the Pulpit of St.
Joseph's Sunday morning, as not a whisper of the revival
of the supposedly
dead and forgotten romance had passed the lips of
either of the lovers.
(Submitter's Notes - Ellen Rial Horty was the daughter
of Thomas Rial and
Mary Burke Rial. In the Clare/Barnum area at
this time there was a second
Ellen Rial, daughter of Cornelius"Con" Rial and Bridget
Burke Rial. The 2
Ellens were cousins.)
Submitted by Shannon Zuzek