THURSDAY, MARCH 15,1962 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page FIVE ¥J Women's Activities andSandhillsSocialE vents MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE OX 2-6512 1 : ^ . Looking Ahead BIRD CLUB The Southern Pines Bird Club will begin its meetings on Friday, March 16, at 9:30 a. m., 160 South Bennett St. If the weather is bad, the meeting will be held indoors; otherwise, there will be a field trip. Any persons interested in birds are invited to attend. ST. ANNE’S GUILD St. Anne’s Guild of Emmanuel Episcopal Church will meet Mon day at 8 p. m. in the parish hall. Mrs. Matt Wall of High Point, chairman of the Legislative Com mittee of the Episcopal Church Women, will address the group on “The Church’s Responsibility to Legislation.” CARD PARTY A benefit dessert card party, sponsored by the Sandhills B&PW Club, wiU begin at 8 p.m. tomor row, Friday, at the Southern Pines Country Club. The party, open to all, will feature bridge, canasta and other card games. Admission tickets will be sold at the door: proceeds go to the Club’s scholarship fund. BPO DOES BPO Does, Drove 42, will meet Tuesday at 8 p. m. at the South ern Pines Country Club. GENERAL MEETING The general meeting of the Wo men of Brownson Memorial Pres byterian Church will be held Monday evening at 8 p.m. with Mrs. Raymond Cameron in charge of the program. Participating will be: Mrs. Joseph Marley, Mrs. Wil liam Bodker, Miss Pearl McNeill and Mrs. Charles Phillips. RAINBOW GIRLS The Sandhill Assembly 40, Or der of Rainbow for Girls, will hold a meeting at the Masonic Hall on Thursday, March 22. PROTECTION For the protection of your health, we follow your doctor’s prescriptions with professional precision. Accuracy comes first with us . . . always! Call us day or night for prompt home delivery service! CRAIG DRUG CO. Walgreen Agency , ABERDEEN N. C. ' In and Out of Town Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Holt of Bar berton, Ohio and Mrs. Betsy Woolweaver of East Liverpool, Ohio, have been guests at the home of the D. M. Hawks, on Hill and Barber Roads. Mrs. Wool- weaver and Miss Margaret Hawk are vacationing in Miarni, Fla. Mrs. Matt Wall and Mrs. S. S. Saunders of High Point will be Monday overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Powell Alexander on Midland Road. Mr. and Mrs. Brown Hill Bos well and his brother. Bob, arrive today from Montgomery, Ala. for a weekend visit with Mrs. Bos well’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James D. Hobbs on Valley Road. Here for a 10-day spring vaca tion with their parents are Ronny Brown and Thomas Reams, both cadets at the McCallie School, Chattanooga, Tenn. ’The boys re turn to school Tuesday. Graham Culbreth returned home Saturday from Moore Memorial Hospital, where he has been a patient following a heart attack. He is getting along well. During Mr. Culbreth’s absence from the Southern Pines Phar macy, Tom R. Cole, Willis White- head and John Terrell, all regis tered pharmacists from Sanford, are substituting for him. The E. W. Mullers have return ed to their Knollwood Apart ments from a month’s trip to At lanta, Jackson and Houston, where they visited friends. While in Houston as guests at the home of Hon. Sam D. W. Low, collector of customs for the Houston-Gal- veston District, they were among a large group invited to attend a gala party aboard the M. V. Ru Yung in celebration of the Chi nese Nationalist vessel’s maiden voyage. The Mullersi’ daughter, Mrs. Edwin L. Houston of Hunt ington Beach, Calif., came by jet from the coast to spend a day with them in Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Collins last weekend attended the soph omore parents’ weekend at Con verse College, Spartanburg, S. C. where their daughter, Emmaday, is a student. Tomorrow night, the Collinses plan to attend a recital at Converse of the Modern Dance Group of which Emmaday is pres ident. She has don« much of the choreography and will have sev eral dance solos in the recital. Capt. and Mrs. Chester Beck returned to New York Saturday after a visit here with Mrs. John E. Elmendorf, Jr. in Knollwood. Mrs. Charles de Rham is arriv ing from New York April 1 for her annual spring visit with Mrs. Elmendorf. Dickey Hoskins has been con fined to his home this week with flu. Mrs. Prudence Giles Blue is in Orlando, Fla., as the guest of her son, G. Alton Blue, Jr. and his family. She will visit in Miami Beach before returning home to Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. J. Earl Parker have returned from a trip to the West Coast. While there, they visited their daughter and son- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Prich ard. perky slip-ons by Made just like big sister’s ... the slipohs little girls love so dearlyl Good looking and wonderfully fitting for they're quality-crafted by Billiken. 6.98 1 V 111 s Apparel - Accessories - Shoes ABERDEEN SOUTHERN PINES ... whem your children*Q feet are !n good handsi Mr. and Mrs. Howard Allred and their daughters, Linda Jeanne and Ruth Kay, went to Raleigh Monday night to see “Prescrip tion: Murder,” by Paul Gregory. Linda has been corresponding with one of the stars, Agnes Moorehead and after the play, the Allreds met Miss Moorehead at the stage door and talked to her while she signed autographs. Dr. and Mrs. Walter C. Hilder- man of Charlotte visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hil- derman Sunday at Pine Cone Lodge. Gnests for two weeks at Pine Cone Lodge are Mr. and Mrs. George Lamb and Mrs. Lamb’s mother, Mrs. ’Thomas Hob son, all of Lyonia, N. J. Mr. Lamb is vice president of the American Sugar Company. Guests at the Lodge for a week are Frank R. Maston and Hal Ohns- man, both of Pittsburgh, Pa. Capt. and Mrs. L. A. DesPland returned Monday from Wilming ton, N. C. where they attended a meeting of insurance represen tatives from the district compris ing Wilmington, Goldsboro and Greensboro. A banquet at the Cape Fear Country Club was held with Harvey Radcliffe, retiring district president, as honor guest. GIRL SCOUT LEADERS—In the spotlight during National Girl Scout Week, March 11-18, are local troops and their leaders. Shown here are leaders of Southern Pines Girl Scout troops; front, left to right: Mrs. H. J. Roessel, Mrs. W. T. Huntley, Jr., Mrs. Edward Koshak, Mrs. James Aldridge, Mrs. Voit Gilmore and Mrs. Joseph Sandlin. Back row, same order: Mrs. W. Harrell Johnson, Mrs. Albert Grove, troop organizer; Mrs. Harry Herendeen, Sherwood Brockwell, finance chairman of the Central Carolina Girl Scout Council; Mrs. W. P. Davis, Training chairman; Mrs. Mildred L. Speer and Mrs. Emanuel Sontag, Moore District chairman. Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Sontag and Mr. Brockwell are also Central Carolina Council board meonibers. Leaders not in the picture are: Mrs. James Ratliff, Mrs. Ned Bushby, Mrs. Harry Fullenwi- der, Mrs. William Bonsai, III, Mrs. John Creech, Mrs. W. C. Phipps, David Drexel, Mrs. Allen Brezinsky and Mrs. Norman Black. In West Southern Pines, Mrs. W. G. Hasty is Brownie leader and Mrs. A. B. Barksdale, Intermediate leader. (Humphrey photo) ’SEND ME NO FLOWERS' COMING NEXT WREK Cay, Giddy Musical, ‘The Boy Friend’ Entertaining Audiences at Playhouse TO PREACH HERE— The third in the series of special Lenten services sponsored by The Village Chapel at Pine- hurst and Emmanuel Episco pal Church will be held in Emmanuel Church on Wed nesday evening, March 21, at 8 o’clock. The preacher for this service will be the Rev. James Stirling, rector of Trin ity Church, Columbia, S. C., pictured above. Mr. Stirling was born in Lochwinnoch, Scotland, and came to the United States as a boy. A graduate of Hobart College and Virginia Theological Se minary, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1938, served Churches in Tennessee, Ala bama and Florida, was stu dent chaplain at several jcol- leges and imiversities and was a Navy chaplain who served with the Marines. The public is invited. Town Buys Small Lot Near Mount Hope Cemetery In a short session Tuesday night, the town council author ized Town Manager F. F. (Bud) Rainey to buy for $100 a small triangular piece of land between the town-owned Mount Hope Cemetery and the No. 1 highway parkway right of way. The land, described as useless for any practical purpose, was offered to the Town by its for mer owner. Miss Evelyn Thomas. The town plans to beautify the lot, to improve appearances near the cemetery. Transfer of certain funds within the budget by the manager was approved by the council, although formal authorization of the pro posals was not necessary. The transfers, said the mana ger, will be within departments and will not change the total amount budgeted for any depart ment. Mayor John Ruggles, who is a patient at Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, was absent, and J. D. Hobbs, mayor pro-tem, presided. All other council members were present: Felton Capel, Morris Johnson and Fred Pollard. A gay and giddy production of “The Boy Friend” this week marks the Pinehurst Playhouse’s first venture into imiusical comedy, and vastly entertained the open ing-night audience Tuesday. It’s a grand spoof of the lavish, romantic musicals of the 1920’s, and everybody joins in the spoof ing. There’s a story of sorts but it doesn’t matter too much—it’s just an excuse for the songs, dances, love scenes and comic in terludes. Claiborne Ca:ry as the Dresden- doll heroine sings with a small but true and lucent voice; her “boy friend,” Jerry McKee as the outrageously handsome and gal lant hero, has a voice of rich melodic resonance. Jety Herlick as a merry old harridan—who also happens to be headmistress of a girls’ school in France—belts out her songs in Sophie Tucker style. ’The others do the best they can and the result is good fun if not deathless music. Shelly Post, Gerre Overbrook, Joan Gunther and Dean Delk are the giggling schoolgirls, with Charles Waterman, Henry Stro- zier, Del Grande and Jim Bateman as their bounding swains. For this show a dance director has been engaged and he has done a slick job, with some brisk dances in which somehow no one trips on the others or falls on his face on the tiny Pinehurst Theatre stage. It’s all very neat and also gaudy, in pastel colorings from the palette of a berserk rainbow- painter. The acting, costmnes and set are stylized in what is sup posedly the manner of the Roaring Twenties. Miss Herlick, Bruce Hall, Georgia Bennett and Robert Pastene in comic parts provide a ..J OxuJjtff k, I NEV BREAST FORT FOR rOST-IUSIECTIUn Now • rovohitloiMry mIwOom Io • doOcate proMam. Tha boaa a< Nta forw la a ahapad a»o«md al aoll pRabla plaatlc loam. Saalad to tMa boaa la a Mm, creates waahabla plaatlc abal eatural “L!? ramovad and a aaN- SenSatiOO.. aaanng liquid Injactad aatnral ** match tha normal lamininn Tha liquid ra- leiDlilllie tpondt rapidly and MOearanCe snantly to tha anghtaat motion—it't so natural a«an you can forgot Tha antira form la anclosad In an aaafly laundared nylon cover for insar- don Into tha pocket of any bra desired. Developed in concert with leading surgeons. Ask about TruUfe today. *pa«entsa Camp Supports and Appliances are scientifically fitted here by registered fitters. CULBRETH’S Southern Pines Pharmacy (At Railway Station) Southern Pines Tel. 0X5-5321 CLAIBORNE CARY change of pace. In the end, of course, all the couples fall into each other’s arms in what is surely the corniest (on purpose) climax on any stage. Milton Setzer as musical direc tor is another new name for this week’s show, heading an excel lent four-piece combo for the “Boy Friend” score. The cast, directors, etc., must have knocked themselves out to put on a show of this sort in their one-week' rehearsal time, while many of the players were also performing at night in last week’s play, “The Tender Trap.” They’ve done a real “pro” job. The show wiU continue through Sunday night, curtain time 8:30, Saturday matinee at 2. “Send Me No Flowers” will be the Playhouse’s presentation next week, opening Tuesday night at 8:15, to run through the following Sunday, March 25. —VN Father of Aberdeen Residents Succumbs A. L. Nunnery, 78, of Roseboro, father of Mrs. H. Clifton Blue and Mrs. Anne Mischke, both of Aber deen, died in Sampson Memorial Hospital in Roseboro last Friday after an extended illness. 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