Page FOUR THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1961 Women's Activities and Sandhills Social Ev'ents MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE OX 2-6512 Models Named for Benefit Fashion Show Here April 10 Duo pianists Thelma Alpert and Frances Webb will be featured dQring the intermission of the. St. Anthony’s Women’s Club fashion show, to be held April 10 in the St. Anthony’s school auditorium. Shops that will be showing, and their models, are, from Southern Pines: Lee Powers Cas ual Shop—Mrs. Cedric Mills- paugh, Mrs. Hoke Pollock, Mrs. Hilbert Johnson, Miss Toni Cor nett. Fi'anjean’s—^Mrs. Bruce War- lick; Bozick’s—^Misses Katie Tate and Julie McMillan; Tot’s Tog gery—Mrs. Charles Phillips, Mrs. Charles Marcum, Miss Sylvia Kimbro; children—Joan Phillips, Spring Page, Nancy Gadd, Ellen Weldon, Fred Hollister and Pat Rainey. Pinehurst shops: Christine, Page, Inc.—Miss Gloria Oc- chipente, Mrs. Les Smithson, Mrs. W. H. Frantz, Jr., Jean Stevenson; Razook’s—^Mrs. Voit Gilmore, Mrs. Lawrence John son, Mrs. John Ostrom; children —Lisa Poluso, Carleen Moser, Audrey Owens, Susie Gilmore, Hannah Aldredge, Prancisca and Angela Drexel, Catherine Drexel. Frank & Frances’s—Mrs. Al fred Derouin; Naomi’s—Mrs. Jack Rettew; Bettye’s—Misses Sandra Bridges, Patsy McRee, Kathy Sandstrom, Puirette Du- fort; children — Peggy Patch, Phoebe Walsh, Margaret Dough erty, Penny McCaskill. Hair styles are by Style-O- Rama of Southern Pines. Tickets for the show are avail able from club members. HOSTESSES ASSIGNED TO HOMES ON GARDEN TOUR AT GARDEN CLUB MEET Mrs. James S. Milliken was promising the efforts of his crew hostess to the Southerh , Pines' in a clean-up prior to the tour. Garden Club Monday afternoon which takes place next Wednes- at her home, with Mrs. N. L. day. Hodgkins, Sr., presiding over a! Hostesses were assigned to the session brimful of reports of past various homes included on the accomplishment, for which ex- tour, which starts at 9:30 a. m. at pressions of appreciation were the Shaw House, where luncheon given, and of details of forthcom- will be served. It was noted that ing activities. I visitors do not have to go to the Mrs. Robert C. VanderVoort Shaw House to start, but may was thanked for s-eeing that flow- begin at any of the homes. Re- ers were placed at the Antiques freshments will be served at the Show last week, and Mrs. Deni- Eullens place, where the gardens son K. Bullens for the lovely but not the house will bo shown, buffet served press nspresenta- Mrs. Robert S. Ewing is general tives from several dailies who, chairman of this 13th annual on Saturday morning prior to the Home and Garden Tour. Stoneybrook races, were con- New plantings at the East ducted on a preview tour of the Southern Pines School and at the gardens to be included on the an- laundry were reported, nual tour next week. 1 Mrs. Marion T. Brawley Thanks went to Harry M. Vale brought to the meeting a variety for lilies which he donated to the of interesting blossoms which club for planting in town, and she passed around and discussed, appreciation to Town Manager • ’The meeting ended with a de- Louis Scheipers, Jr., for a letter- lightful tea. DUKE STUDENTS, MISS PATRICIA BIGGERS AND WILLIAM E. SHAAF, WED IN DURHAM Miss Patricia Biggers and Wil-, Her husband, son of Mr. and liam Edward Shaaf were married' Mrs. Weldon E. Sliaaf of Mans* ' field, Ohio, will graduate from Duke in June. Given in marriage by her fath er, the bride wore a royal blue jersey suit with blu.s and white shantung blouse and clutch jack- March 17 in the Trinity Avenue Presbyterian Church, Durham. Dr. William C. Bennett offici ated at the simple ceremony which was attended by members of the immediate families only Mrs. Agnes Skillen, organist, played a program of nuptial music. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Biggers of Hertford and the graddaughtei of Mrs. W. Hulon Cole of Pine hurst. She is a graduate of Duke University, where she will re ceive her master’s degree this spring. Linda Phillips on Dean’s List at' Flora Macdonald . Miss Linda Phillips, a senior at Flora Macdonald College, Red Springs, has been named on the Dean’s list for the first college semester. The Dean’s list requires a grade average of 90-94. Linda was also recently named class poet. She is .the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Phillips of Raeford. Mr. Phillips, a Manly native, has taught Agriculture in the Rae ford high school for , several years. He is a graduate of the Southern Pines high school and N. C. State College. MRS. WILLIAM CLARKE DAVIS MISS NANCY ANN EBERHART, WILLIAM CLARKE DAVIS MARRIED IN ATHENS, GA. The first Baptist Church in attired in candlelight beige bro- Athens, Ga. was the scene of thej cade with matching accessories, et with full sleeves. She carried redding March 17 of Miss Nancy She carried a cascade bouquet of a white Bible topped with white; Eberhart and William Clarke pink split carnations, orchids. i Davis. Her maid of honor. Miss Joan na P. Williford of Hertford wore a kelly green suit with clutch jacket with navy and white trim. Her bouquet was of carnations and mums. Theodore McDonald of Buffa lo, N. Y. was the best man. Vass Girl Will Go On Concert Tour With Pfeiffer Choral Group The Pfeiffer College Concert Choir will feature the moving arrangement of the Negro spir itual “God’s Trombones” in ite annual spring tour, April 1-10. which includes four eastern states. Singing first soprano in the choir is Miss Ann Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. G Edwards, Jr., of Vass. Miss Ed wards, a freshman, is a Music Ed ucation major and has been ac tive in a number of student af fairs on the campus. She is a 1960 graduate of Vass-Lakeview High School. The 40-voice choral group will I luncheon for press representa- open its spring tour by providing tives from over the state follow- Plate Lunches to be Served at Shaw House During Garden Tour (More About Giarden Tour. Front Page) Mrs. A. P. ’Thompson, Shaw House chairman, is in charge of arrangements for the plate lunch es to be served Wednesday dur ing the Home and Garden Tour. Assisting will be Mrs. Ernest L. Ives, Mrs. Edward Schneider, and others fronj Southern Pines and surrounding towns. Tables will be set up on the lawn and in charge of junior hostesses who will serve is Mrs. Murray Clark, president of the local Junior Women’s Club. Mrs. Denison K. Bullens, who entertained Saturday at a buffet the music for an Easter Sunrise program on the famed steel pier of Atlantic City, N. J. The group is under the direction of William B. Thomas of thd college faculty. ■ A total of 21 concerts will be presented on the 10-day tour, I which will include appearances in Virginia, Maryland, Pennsyl vania and New Jersey. In March, the Concert Choir was featured on “Adventures In Ideas” over WSOC-TV, Char lotte. Silver Foils Club Winners Named ing their preview tour of this year’s list of homes and gardens, will again as last year, serve iced tea and cookies in the gardens of Homewood. This “iced tea break,” following the pattern of garden tours in other places, is a welcome re fresher, for those making the tour can relax in chairs set about in the azalea bordered gardens. Homewood gardens, but not the house, are included in the list of seven homes and gardens to be shown during this year’s tour, sponsored by the Southern Pines Garden Club. There were fifty-five entries in last week’s Silver Foils Club match, postponed from Tuesday to Tliursday. Tied at plus seven in the match play against par event for all four partners, played over .the Pinehurst Country Club’s number one course, were Miss Margaret B. Lavery, Miss Helen Musser, Mrs. John W. Rettew and Mrs. L. Paget Rigby with Mrs. Alfred N Derouin, Mrs. Walter G. Robins, Mrs. J. A. Ruggles and Mrs. Wil liam H. Schille. On a sudden death decision re sulting from' matching cards, the first foursome were declared win ners. ’This week’s Silver Foils Club tourney, held Tuesday, was a par-bogey event for the best ball of all four partners. Of the 15 foursomes competing, the winning combination was that comprising Mrs. Stuart H. Patterson, Mrs. John B. von Schlegell, Mrs. William C. Har ris and Mrs. Louis C. Melcher who scored 48-46 for a 94-point i total. The foursome scoring 48-40 for 88 points and the runner-up posi tion was that of Mrs. Edward L. Nesbitt, Mrs. Morrison B. Orr, Mrs. Staley Tregellas and Mrs. Q. A. Shaw McKean. The Rays Leave for Scarborough to Attend Ray-Walton Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Dan S. Ray, Jr left today for Scarborough, N. Y., to attend the wedding of Miss Harriett Walton and their young est son, Lt. John Charles Ray, of Laredo Air Force Base, Texas, which takes place Saturday in the Scarborough Presbyterian Church. Miss Walton is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Walton. Driving to Scarborough with them are Mr. and Mrs. Dan S. Ray III and children, Mike and Julia, of Charlotte, Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. Ray, Sandra and Shaw, of Winston-Salem, and Julian Pleasants of Southern Pines. Dr. Ray will be his brother’s best man, Sandra will be flower girl, and Dan Ray III and Mr. Pleasants will be ushers. Officiating at the evening cere mony was Dr. Howard P. Gid- dens. The vows were spoken in front of the altar backed with candles and greenery and flank ed by baskets of white gladiolas and carnations. Mr. and Mrs. William Eberhart of Athens are the bride’s parents. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Purl Davis of Sandavis, Southern Pir^cs. Mrs. Allan Arnold, organist, played traditional wedding music and Cecil Johnson sang “Be cause” and “The Lord’s Prayer.” The bride was given in mar riage by a cousin, James Thur mond of Athens. Her gown had a bodice of Chantilly lace with sweetheart neckline emproidered with seed pearls, sleeves ending in points over the hands and a peau d.2 soie skirt embroidered with handmade roses and termi nating in a chapel train. Her cas cade bouquet was of white split Mr. Turk was best man and ushers were Terry W. Chandler of Athens and James F. Gaines, Arlington, Va. The bride’s mother wore a blue crepe sheath with lace-trimmed bodice and matching accessories and a white orchid corsage. The bridegroom’s mother’s dress was of champagne lace with accents of pink satin, and she al so had a white orchid corsage. A reception was held follow ing the ceremony in the church’s fellowship hall. For traveling, the bride chose a pale gold wool suit with bone accessories and the orchid from her bridal bouquet. The couple is at home at 195 Scott Street, Athens. Mrs. Davis is a graduate of Ihe LTniversity of Georgia. Her hus band will'graduate from the Uni versity of Georgia in June with a doctorate in veterinary medi- cir.?. He is a graduate of North carnations centered with a white j Carolina State College, Raleigh, orchid. She wore a single strand; and a member of Omega Tau of pearls, a gift of the brid.’groom. Sigma professional fraternity, and a diamond broo6h belonging Attending the wedding from to his mother, a gift from her, North Carolina were the brido- husband on her wedding day. ' groom’s parents and their 4augh- The matron of honor, Mrs. Ar-| ter, Perry and son, Chris, and thur Lloyd Turk of Athens, was Mrs. Robert Cline of Durham. Jessie Lewis Wallace Of Carthage to Wed Roy Fuquay Burt Mrs. Jessie Lewis Wallace of Carthage announces the engage ment of her daughter, Jessie La- zell, to Roy Fuquay Burt, sbn of Mr. and Mrs. Max R. Burt of Fu quay Springs. A late spring wedding is plan ned. Brownson Memorial Circles 1-7 Will Meet Next Week The following Circles of Brown- son Memorial Church will meet next: Circle 1 at 8 p.m. Monday, April 3, with Miss Ruth Smith, 680 South May Street. Circle 2 with Mrs. J. S. Mc- Lauchlin, 280 East Indiana Aven ue, at 8 p.m. Monday. Circle 3 with Mrs. W. J. Heth- cox, 225 North May Street, Tues day, April 4, at 3 p.m. Circle 4 Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. with Miss Ethel Blue Britt, 560 North Ashe Street. Circle 5 at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 6, with Mrs. W. J. Graham, 580 South Valley Road. Circle 6 at 8 p.m. Thursday with Mrs. Charles Wicker, 540 East Delaware Avenue. Circle 7 with Miss Gussie Cam eron, 215 North Bennett Street, Thursday at 8 p.m. Patti Larson Celebrates Birthday With Party for 60 Patti Larson, daughter of Mrs, Vern Larson of 680 South May Street, was hostess to 60 of her classmates at the Civic Club Fri day, March 24. The occasion was to celebrate her fourteenth birth day, which was the 28th of March. The Club was decorated with purple and white flowers and streamers, with a huge birthdaiJ^ cake as centerpiece on the can dle-lighted refreshment table. After the lovely gifts were opened and displayed, the eve ning was spent in dancing and the playing of games. Out of town guests included Larry Royal and Ben Tew, E.M.I. s;tu- dents spending the weekend with Coach Williams, who also joined the party. 25 Homemakers from Moore Attend State Meeting in Raleigh Twenty-five Homemakers from Moore County attended the State Home Demonstration Council meeting in Raleigh. Dr. Samuel Proctor, President of A. and T. College spoke to a group of two thousand Home Demonstration Club Members on the subject “Saving Today’s Home.” In his message he stated, “It’s your re sponsibility homemakers, to save the home.” The Home Demonstration County Council heard Mrs. Jane Starthers, home economist, Caro lina Power and Light Company, discuss adequate size wiring and .fuses for thie home to accommo date the usage of household modem electric appliances. Forty-two club members and men attended this meeting in Robbins. Women’s Fellowship Holds Panel Discussion On Social Problems The monthly meeting of the 'Women’s Fellowship of the Church of Wide Fellowship was held Thursday afternoon in the Robert Lee House Chapel, with a good attendance. i Mrs. Hicks Keser presented a Guy C. Smith, Hosts To First Guests in Newly Decorated Home Mr. and Mrs. Guy C. Smith are now occupying their remodeled residence in Knollwood—the for mer home of Dr. and Mrs. P. J. |- Chester. The Smiths, former residents of Grosse Point, Mich., who bought the Chester house late last year, have been living at the Mid Pines program on Christian social ac Club while work on their house tion, in the form of a panel dis- has been going on. Their first guests, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Griffith, who were en route from Naples, Fla. to their home in Indianapolis, Ind., were entertained there last weekend. This weekend they expect their daughter, Mrs. Francis E. Bros- sy. III and her two children, of Grosse Point, Mich. Mr. Brossy will join his family here later. Extensive remodeling was un dertaken at the Knollwood house and it iwas completely refurn ished. Some work on a terrace remains to be done. Mr. and Mrs. Smith, who like to travel, plan to make Southern Pines their home for most of each year, traveling in January and February. After coming here for a number of years as winter visitors, they decided last fall to buy and settle here because of the climate, because they like golf and because of the area’s accessibility to ^ the Detroit area where they lived for many years, to points south and to New York City. In August of last year, Mr. Smith retired as chairman of the board and treasurer of Brook, Smith, French and Dorrance, Inc., Detroit advertising agency, when .that agency was merged with Ross Roy, Inc., another Detroit agency, becoming senior consult ant to the new agency which has, offices in New York, on the West Coast, Detroit and Windsor and cussion. Members of the group participated with questions, an swers, and general discussion of such topics as the harmful ef fects of movies, segregation, and other social problems of the pres ent. Tsa was served after the meet ing in the church parlor by the Fanny Timmons Circle. 30 Bird Species Noted on Bird Club’s Field Trip Members of the Southern Pines Bird Club were rewarded with a list of 30 species on Fri day’s trip to Powell’s Pond and the lake at Lakeview. Unusual varieties noted inclu ded the red-breasted merganser and osprey. Those interested in birds are invited to join the group which meets at 9:30 each Friday morn ing at 160 South Bennett Street. Toronto, in Canada. The Smiths have four daugh ters, Mrs. Robert M. Stevenson, Jr., of New York City, Mrs. Fran cis E. Brossy, III and Mrs. Barb ara Willmore, both of Grossp Point, and Miss Marion Leigh Smith of Bakersfield, Calif., and four grandchildren.. A GIFT FOR EVERY OCCASION SILVER — CHINA — CRYSTAL LINENS OVENPROOF EARTHENWARE Wedding Invitations And Announcements Theodota Southern Pines Bank Bldg MOVING TO NEW LOCATION Studio Bookshop Will Move To 105 E. Pennsylvania Avenue ^ On Or About April 10 To Be Better-Read, Better-Informed, Read Books From The Studio Bookshop ni31,a6 PALOMINO RESTAURANT U. S. Hy. 1 By-Pass 214 miles south of Sanford, N. C. I SPECIALIZING IN CHARCOAL STEAKS and SEAFOOD Private Dining Room . . . Enjoyable Atmosphere Tel- spring 4-7665 J26tf AIR TICKETS CRUISES TOURS -:- RESOR'TS Domestic and World-Wide Travel Personal Planning SHEARWOOD TRAVEL SERVICE Pinehurst, N. C. CY 4-4122 ^An\. PHARMACISTS TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION Let us fill your next Prescription OPEN SUNDAY Broad Street Pharmacy PHARMACISTS George Morrison J®® MontesantL Jr., Prop. Phone OX 5-5411 — Southern Pines. N. C. Skilled' Professional RUG & CARPET • CLEANING •REPAIRING Oriental and Domestic Call, write or visit us for more, information about our very complete rug service. Profess'onal plant cleaning methods combined with skilled hand operations make our service the most satisfactory in the area. REPAIRING AND RE WEAVING ORIENTAL AND EUROPEAN RUGS — A LONG-TIME SPECIALTY. SERUNIAN'S CARPETORIUM 1311 Grove SL Phone BR 2-2294 GREENSBORO, N.C.

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