THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28,1957
THE PILOT-—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page FIVE
Women’s Activities
and Sandhills Social Events
BESSIE CAMERON SMITH, Editor TELEPHONE 2-6512
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Football Fans Solve
TraffiQ Problem By
Chartering Bus
Football fans from all over the
State were Durham bound last
Saturday for the game between
Duke and Carolina. A large
number from Southern Pines
beat the traffic problem by go
ing by chartered bus. This is the
second year this group has gone
by bus, and it bids fair to be
come an annual custom.
In the party were Dr. and Mrs.
Bruce Warlick, Dr. and Mrs. W.
F. Hollister, Dr. and Mrs. R. M.
McMillan, Dr. and Mrs. J. S.
Hiatt, Jr., Dr. and Mrs. Harrell
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Voit Gil
more, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Hill,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Beith, Mr.
and Mrs. John Ponzer, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Pottle, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Smithson, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Tom How
erton, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Hines,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Victor Shep
hard, and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Johnson of Aberdeen.
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS WATSON BUCHANAN
MISS JOYCE SCOTT AND MR. BUCHANAN
TAKE VOWS IN VASS METHODIST CHURCH
Miss Joyce Scott, youngest
daughter of Mrs. Furman Scott
and the- late Mr. Scott of Vass,
became the bride of Thomas
Watson Buchanan, son of James
Buchanan and the late Mrs. Buchr
anan of Broadway, in a double
ring ceremony solemnized at the
Vass Methodist Church at 5
o’clock Satimday, November 23.
The bride’s pastor, the Rev. T.
Fant Steeie, Jr., officiated.
The church was decorated with
arrangements of white gladioli,
white chrysanthemums and pom
pons against a backgroimd of em
erald and seven-branched candel
abra holding cathedral tapers.
Special pews were marked with
white pompons and fern caught
with white ribbon.
Prior to the ceremony Eddie
AUred, pianist, and Miss Shirley
Thorpe, niece of the bride, both of
Greensboro, presented a program
of wedding music. Miss Thorpe
sang “Because” and “I Love You
Truly,” and, as a benediction,
‘"The Lord’s Prayer.”
The bride, who was given in
marriage by h«r brother-in-law,
Tom Thorpe of Greensboro, wore
a wedding gown of white satin
fashioned with fitted bodice and
flared skirt which extended into
a chapel train, and a lace bolero
with long sleeves. Her elbow
length veil was attached to a
lace cap. She carried a white Bi
ble topped with a white orchid
and showered with stephanotis.
Miss Agnes Boggs was maid
of honor and the bride’s other at
tendants were her four sisters,
Mrs. Coynell Cameron of Cam
eron, Mrs. Jack Armstrong of
Sanford, Mrs. Tom Thorpe of
Greensboro, and Mrs. Bill Coe of
Vass. The four sisters wore iden
tical ballerina length dresses of
red brocaded taffeta, fashioned
with fitted bodices, boat neck
lines and circular skirts. Their
headdresses were of red net and
they carried bouquets of
white carnations and roses with
white satin streamers. The honor
attendant’s gown was of the same
material, with similarly designed
bodice, and pleated skirt. Red
carnations were combined with
white carnations and roses in her
bouquet.
Mr. Buchanan had Roger Mc
Donald of Cameron as best man.
Ushers were Roy Frye of Vass,
Danny Cameron of Cameron,
George Mason, Jr., of Sanford,
and Jack Kennedy of Sanford.
Mrs. Scott, mother of the bride,
wore beige lace over pinkish
beige taffeta and pink accessories.
Her corsage was of orchids. Mrs.
Jim Boggs, sister of the bride
groom, was dressed in navy blue,
with an orchid corsage.
Immediately after the cere
mony a reception was held in
the fellowship hall of the church.
The refreshment table was cover
ed with a white cloth and held an
arrangement of white chrysanthe
mums, flanked by white candles.
At one end was a fbree-tiered
wedding cake topped with a min
iature bride and groom, and at
the other a pimch bowl at which
the bride’s aunt, Mrs. George
Hilliard of Aberdeen, presided.
Cake was served by two cousins
of the bride, Mrs. John Hedden
of Aberdeen and Mrs. J. B. Sim
mons of Greensboro.
The bride attended Vass-Lake-
view School and is employed by
Cornell-Dubilier Company in
Sanford. The bridegroom is em
ployed by the same firm and also
engages in farming. Upon their
return from their wedding trip
they wiU be at home at Broad
way.
After the rehearsal Friday night
Mrs. J. W. Allen and daughter,
Mrs. Annie B. GiUiland, grand
mother and aunt of the bride, en
tertained the wedding party in
formally at their home, serving
cake, cookies, and coffee.
Mrs. A. W. Swift of Winter
Haven, Fla., is spending a week
vdth her sister. Miss Lessie Mc
Neill.
Local Women Attend
Convention In
Washington, D. C.
Miss Mary Scott Newton, State
president of the Supreme Forest
Woodmen Circle, and Miss
Louise Crain, fmancial secretary
of the local Dogwood Grove No
253, returned last ’Thursday from
Washington, D. C., where they
attended the National Conven
tion of the Circle held at the
Statler Hotel from Saturday
through Wednesday.
While in the capital city the two
were guests of Mrs. Carrie Ir
ving, a former Southern Pines
resident, and they visited an
other former local resident, Mrs.
Agnes Hamlin.
Miss Newton also spent a
night with Miss Ruth Hagaman,
with whom she had been em
ployed at Knollwood Field and
whom she had not seen for 11
years.
INS AND OUTS
Among the visitors here for the
Thanksgiving Hunt of the Moore
County Hounds, which opens the
formal season of foxhunting in
the Sandhills, are Mr. and Mrs.
William- Tate and son Beaver of
Cockeysville. Md., the Victor
Siftons and Clifford Siftons, of
Canada, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Webb of Stamford, Conn., and
Earl S. Hoy of Hackensack, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. James Ratliff will
spend Thanksgiving in Florelhce,
S. C., with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. W. Seagle, where a fami
ly reunion will be held. 'The cele
bration will be continued with a
Saturday night dinner and week
end visit at the home of the Rat
liffs in Sotuhern Pines. Their
g)iests will be her parents; a sis
ter, Mrs. James S. Clark and
c.nildren. Ting and Cathy, of
Myrtle Beach; her brother , and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
Page of Walterboro, S. C., and an
aunt, :^rs. W. D. Ott, with her
son Billy, of Columbia, S. C.
Mrs. Charles E. Crowell had as
luncheon guests Sunday Mrs.
Kenneth Trousdell, a former lo
cal resident who is visiting in
Pinehurst, and Mrs. Fred Mc
Bride.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Cooper of
New York City of the National
Steeplechase and Hunt Associa
tion, spent Friday and Saturday
at the Howard Johnson Motor
Lodge. They were here in con
nection with the Stoneybrook
Steeplechase.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Walsh left
this week for New York, from
where they will go to Ireland for
two weeks.
7^anks^mt0
Special
Turkey Dinner With All The Trimmings
HOURS: 12 NOON TILL 12 MIDNIGHT
COME IN AND MAKE A WISH ON
THE WORLD’S LARGEST CANDLE
HOLLIDAYS
SOUTHERN PINES, N. C.
eral Home in Southern Pines.
Mr. and Mrs. Hardister wiU
make their home in Southern
Pines.
MRS; FRANK GERALD HARDISTER
BAPTIST CHURCH IN ABERDEEN IS SCENE
OF HARDISTER-WICKER WEDDING SUNDAY
The First Baptist Church in
Aberdeen was the scene of the
wedding of Miss Lila Marie
Wicker and Frank Gerald Har
dister at 4 o’clock Sunday after
noon, with the pastor, the Rev.
F. Eugene Deese, officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Raymond B. Wicker of Aber
deen and the late Mr. Wicker. The
groom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs.
B. F. Hardister of Ashley
Heights.
The church was effectively
decorated with arrangements of
white chrysanthemums, gladioli
and pompons, eiherald ’ foliage
and candles in seven-branched
candelabra.
Mrs. Lamar K. Smith of Aber
deen, organist, played the wed
ding music.
The bride was givpn in mar
riage by her uncle, the Rev. Max
W, Wicker, of Richmond, Va. She
wore a full length gown of bro
caded satin of princess style with
round neckline and full skirt ex
tending into a chapel train. Her
two-tiered veil of silk illusion
was attached to a tiara of lace
and seed pearls with rhinestone
accents. Her corsage was of ivory
chrysanthemums. •
Miss Laura Burt Williams of
Durham was the bride’s maid of
honor and only attendant. She
wvire a formal gown of turquoise
taffeta featuring a, peacock bustle
effect extending into a full
panel in the back. Her headpiece
v/as of matching rolled velvet
with seed pearl trim and a flir
tation veil. She carried yellow
chrysanthemums.
Mr. Hardister was attended by
Dannie C. Sheffield of Southern
Pines as best man. Ushers were
Thomas Brigman of Laurinburg,
Freddie Cummings of Graham,
Barton Hardister of Durham, un
cle of the groom, and Troy Geer
of Aberdeen.
The bride’s mother wore a
beige embroidered sheath with
brown accessories and a corsage
of dark brown cymbidium or
chids. Mrs. Hardister, mother of
the groom* was dressed in moss
green faille crepe and her cor
sage was of browh orchids.
The bride is a graduate of
Aberdeen High School and Watts
Hospital School of Nursing in
Durham. She is employed at
Moore Memorial Hospital in
Pinehurst.
Mr. Hardister attended the
University of North Carolina and
is now employed by Powell Fun-
INS and OUTS
Mrs. Audrey K. Kennedy is
leaving Sunday for a week’s stay
in Boston and New York.
Mrs. Leslie E. Hogue, who has
been visiting her sister, Mrs. E.
M. Poate for two weeks, left
Wednesday for her home in Jen-
kintown. Pa.
Louis Honeycutt and son. Skip,
left Monday night for Memphis,
Tern., to see Mr. Honeycutt’s
mother, who is very ill.
C. O. Butler of White Plains,
N. Y., spent from Thursday un
til Monday in the home of his
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Butler.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cooking-
ham of Elmer, N. J., spent last
week in town, guests at the
Hrwletts’ place on May Street.
Mr. and Mrs, J. Wallace Allen
of New Wilmington, Pa., winter
residents of Southern Pines for
several' seasons, arrived last
week and are staying at 330 East
Massach-usetts Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Speight will
haye as their Thanksgiving Day
and. weekend guests their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Randolph Speight of New
York City. ;
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