THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1962
Womens Activities
and Sandhills Social
[rY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor
Events
TELEPHONE OX 2-6512
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Churchwomen of
Emmanuel Attend
District Meeting
Tlie Spring meeting of tbs
Episcopal Churchwomen of the
Richmond District was held
Tuesday at Calvary Church in
Wadesboro.
The Rev. Martin Caldwell, rec
tor of Emmanuel Church here,
and eight members of the parish,
attended the service of Holy
Communion at 10 a. m. and the
meeting afterward, conducted by
Mrs. James E. Parks, of Southern
Pines, chairman, and Mrs. Hugh
Carter of Pinehurst, secretary and
treasurer of the District.
Mrs. Chadwick Smith, Diocesan
secretary of Christian Social Re
lations, gave an interesting talk
followed by noonday prayers
conducted by the Rev. Mr. Cald
well.
A workshop, with suggestions
for work of the coming year, was
directed by Mrs. Harry S. Cobey,
District secretary of Christian Ed
ucation.
The Rev. Harry Cobey installed
new District officers.
A luncheon in the parish hall
followed the business session.
Members of Emmanuel Church
attending the meeting were: Mrs.
Parks, Miss Lillian Parks, Mrs.
Thomas Kelley, Mrs. Carter, Mrs.
Sherwood Brockwell, Mrs. Roy
Grinnell, Mrs. Norris L. Hodgkins
and Miss Louise Haynes.
June Wedding Is
Planned by Elaine
Dabbs, Lamar Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weingarten
of 351 Churchill Road, West Palm
Beach, Fla., announce the en
gagement of their daughter,
Elaine Dabbs, to Lamar Killings-
worth Smith, Jr., whos.3 parents
live in Rocky Mount.
The bride-elect attended the
Southern Pines School during the
years that she lived here. Her
fiance and his parents were for
many years residents of Aber
deen where Mr. Smith was Chief
of Police.
A late June wedding is plan
ned.
jM <
PVT. AND MRS. HARVEY WHITE
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DR. LIGON OFFICIATES AT WEDDING OF
MISS MASON AND PVT. HARVEY WHITE
Brownson Memorial Presby
terian Church was the scene Sat
urday of the wedding of Miss
Alicia Ingram Mason and Pvt.
Harvey R. White. The" church’s
former pastor. Dr. Cheves K.
Ligon, now executive secretary of
Fayetteville Presbytery, officiated
at the 5 o’clock ceremony.
Mrs. John McPhaul was organist
and the soloist was Robert Mat
thews,
A reception followed in the
church parlor.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. J. K. Mason of 355 East
Indiana Avenue, and Mr. Mason.
Her husband’s parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey White of Pine-
bluff.
Mrs. Richard Lawhom was her
sister’s matron of honor. Miss
Patsy Gamer of Niagara was a
bridesmaid and Oma Ruth Law
hom, the bride’s niece, served as
her junior attendant.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a street
length dress of white silk organza
with boat neck, cap sleeves and
bouffant skirt. Her full elbow
length illusion veil was centered
at the forehead with a self-rose
and valley lilies. She wore elbow
length gloves and carried a Bible
topped with a white orchid and
valley lilies.
The matron of honor and brides
maids wore short dresses of blue
satin with flirtation veils of the
same color and carried blue and
white feathered carnations.
The bride’s mother was attired
in an aqua silk sheath; the bride
groom’s mother wore a dress of
the same shade, in linen, and both
had gardenia corsages.
After a short wedding trip, Mrs.
White returned to her home here
while her husband went back
to Fort Jackson, S. C. where he
will complete his advanced Army
training, after which his wife will
join him.
A graduate of the Southern
Pines High School, Mrs. White at
tended Campbell College and re
ceived training as a beautician at
the Southeastern College of Beau-
ty Culture in Charlotte. She is
employed at the Style-O-Rama
Beauty Shop here.
Her husband graduated from
Aberdeen High School and at
tended Western Carolina College.
He joined the U. S. Amy in
January and completed his basic
training at Fort Jackson.
Sandhills Republican
Women Will Hold
Installation Tuesday
Mrs. E. W. Simpson, president
of the North Carolina Federation
of R.epublican Women, and Mrs.
Barbara Rixon, both of Charlotte,
will be on hand for the installa
tion of officers of the Sandhills
Republican Women’s Club.
The ceremony will be held
Tuesday evening at 8 p. m. in the
Plantation Room of the Jefferson
Inn.
Another guest, Mrs. William
Wood of Pinebluff, will tell the
group briefly of the history of
service of the Republican Party
in this state.
Officers to be installed: Mrs.
William R. Bonsai, III, president;
Mrs. James Garrison of Pinehurst,
vice president; Mrs. David Spence
of Pinebluff, secretary; and Mrs.
Robert Leland, treasurer.
All interested women in the
county are invited to attend this
meeting. Refreshments will be
served following the installation.
Peggy Worth Will
Enter Meredith
College, ’66 Class
Peggy Worth, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. T. C. Worth, Jr. of 310
Hill Road, Southern Pines, and
a senior at Southern Pines High
School, was a guest of Meredith
College for the annual “Hospi'
tality Weekend.”
She has been accepted as :
member of the Meredith class of
1966.
Phillips Family Has
Cookout, Attends
“Pinafore” Saturday
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Phillips
entertained at a family cookout
supper at their home on East
Massachusetts Avenue Saturday,
prior to attending the school per
formance at Weaver Auditorium
of “H.M.S. Pinafore.”
Included in the family group,
in addition to the couple’s five
children, were her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry C. Olseng of
Gr&sn Bay, Wise, who are here
for a fortnight’s visit; also Dr.
Phillips’s sister and brother-in-
law, the Rev. and Mrs. James
Cansler and their children, and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. C.
Phillips, all of Chapel Hill.
Raleigh Rose Show
Invites Exhibitors
And Visitors May 19
The finest roses of an excep
tionally favorable growing season
will be .exhibited at the 14th an
nual Raleigh Rose Show on Sat
urday, May 19, from 2 to 10 p. m.
The exhibit will be in the State
Capital Life Insurance Company
building at 2620 Hillsboro Street.
There will be no admission
charge for visitors or entry fee
for exhibitors. Free parking will
be available in two private park
ing lots adjacent to the exhibit
hall.
‘We urge all amateur rose
growers ev.-’rywhere to enter the
competition,” commented Col.
Russell Broaddus, president of
the sponsoring Raleigh Rose So
ciety. “Entries will be accepted
from 8 to 11 a. m. Uniform con
tainers will be provided for speci
men and exhibitors may use their
own vases and accessories for ar-
raneements.”
Silver trophies, American Rose
Society certificates, nursery stock
and ribbons will be awarded in
80 classifications, including hy-
' brid tea, hybrid tea climbers,
granddifloras, floribundas, poly-
anthas, historic roses, minatures,
collections and arrangements.
American Rose Society rules
and standards will be followed
by the non-resident judges. Com
plete rules and schedules are
available through the Raleigh
Rose Society.
NEWLY-ELECTED OFFICERS of Moore
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary are shown on the
lawn at Mrs. James Boyd's home, Weymouth,
following the annual meeting and tea there. Left
to right: Mrs. Bruce Warlick, Mrs. John Read
Burr, Mrs. O. Leon Seymour, Mrs. Paul Dana,
president; Mrs. Edward T. Taws, Jr., Mrs. Mul-
ford Horr, Mrs. Walter G. Robins, Mrs. L. Paget
Rigby and Mrs. William Wadsworth. The offices
they hold are designated in the accompanying
story below.
(Humphrey photo)
MOORE HOSPITAL AUXILIARY HEARS
REPORTS, ELECTS OFFICERS AT MEETING
Bird Club Ends the
Season with Picnic
At Pinebluff Friday
The Southern Pines Bird Club
ended its season Friday with a
picnic at Pinebluff Lake attend
ed by 13 people.
A list of 38 species of birds was
made, including the rose-breast
ed grosbeak, on its way to nest
in the north.
Orchard orioles were singing
joyously and the blue-grey gnat-
catcher, whose nesting site is near
the same tree every year, had a
narrow escape from the fire that
burned the woods nearby.
A list of 98 species has been re
ported this season by the Club.
SAVE THIS AD
SAVE THIS AD
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Edwards of Vass
announce their purchase of the
Style-O-Rama Beauty Salon
— _ , Southern Pines
172 S. W. Broad St.
STAFF
M. CATHERINE EDWARDS. MANAGER
T-Fp: cole FAYE WAGONER
ALICIA MASON WHITE
Hours: 9 to 5:30 Nights by appoiiOment
SPECIAL OFFER
This ad is good for $5 on a cold wave costing $15 and up.
from now until June 15
SAVE THIS AD SAVE THIS AD
Miss Logan Honor
Guest at Lawn
^arty at Weymouth
Mrs. James Boyd and Mrs.
Voit Gilmore were co-hostesses
at a lawn party at the former’s
home, Weymouth, Wednesday
afternoon. The party honored
Miss Mary Logan, and guests
were members of the Southern
Pines Elementary School and
friends of the hostesses.
Miss Logan, who for the past
year has been supervisor of the
Pinehurst and Southern Pines,
elementary schools, will go to
Mars Hill College as Dean of
Women next fall. She plans to
leave here June 9 and will enter
the University of Colorado for a
refresher course this summer.
Pat Starnes Dance
Group to Present
Review May 25, 26
The Pat Starnes School of
Dance will present “Around the
World in 80 Minutes,” a fully cos
tumed dance review with over 60
students participating from
Southern Pines, Aberdeen, Pine
hurst, Robbins, West End and
Carthage.
The admission-free show will
be given two nights,—on Friday,
May 25, at 8 in the Aberdeen
School Auditorium, and on Sat
urday, May 26, also beginning at
8 p. m., in Weaver Auditorium,
Southern Pines.
The public is invited to attend.
3ush-Brindley Team
Wins 1st in Sandhill
Duplicate Club Play
Dr. E. W. Bush and Fred
Brindley teamed to win first place
in the Tuesday evening meeting
of the Sandhill Duplicate Bridge
Club.
Second place winners at the
party, held as usual at the South
ern Pines Country Club, were
Mrs. C. H. Bowman and Mrs. Wil
liam J. Burke. Tied for third place
honors were teams comprising
Mrs. B. W. Dickinson and Mrs.
Lena Fetner of Hamlet and Mrs.
M. W. Hitson and Mrs. Jean Ed
son.
Mesdames Willis and
Patteson Are Two-
Time Bridge Winners
Mrs. Harry Willis and Mxs.
George P. Patteson, both winners
at the Hollywood Bridge Club
party May 8, were again among
those winning table prizes at
Tuesday’s Hollywood Bridge
Club luncheon.
Other bridge winners were
Mrs. Eric Nelson of Pinehurst and
Mrs. F. M. Trimble of Charlotte.
Mrs. Frank Hale won at Mivia.
The luncheon preceding play
was attended by 20 persons This
will be the last luncheon meeting
for the club rmtil fall.
Week’s Arrivals Listed
At Hollywood Hotel;
Guests Entertain There
R. H. Valentine of Stafford
Springs, Conn, has arrived to join
Mrs. VMentine and their daugh
ter, Mrs. Hugh Kabler, who are
spending some time at the Holly
wood Hotel. They are entertaining
Dr. and Mrs. James Healey of
New York City for a few days.
Miss Florence Manning had
guests for dinner last week at the
hotel.
Mrs. Warren C. Edwards has re
turned to the Hollywood, after a
pleasant trip to Philadelphia.
Oscar Steinmetz has returned
from Moore Memorial Hospital,
where he has been a patient for
the past month.
Mrs. E. H. Hookes of Smith-
field and Mrs. R. S. Stevens of
Smithfield, and Mrs. L. A. Col-
trane of Raleigh arrived this
week. Other arrivals were: J. B.
Jones of Hampton, S. C.; D. Gil
bert Lee and Zack Bair of Char
lotte and Scott Venable of
Raleigh.
Mrs. Paul Dana of Pinehurst'
was reelected president of the
Woman’s Auxiliary of Moore
Memorial Hospital at the final
yearly meeting here May 9.
Serving with Mrs. Dana for
1962-63 will be the following slate
of officers: Mrs. John Read Burr
and Mrs. Mulford Horr, Pine
hurst, first and second vice-presi
dents, respectively; Mrs. William
H. Wadsworth, and Mrs. Bruce
Warlick, Southern Pines, record
ing secretary and assistant re
cording secretary; Mrs. L. Padget
Rigby and Mrs. Walter G. Robins,
Pinehurst, treasurer and assist
ant treasurer; Mrs. O. Leon Sey
mour and Mrs. Edward T. Taws,
Jr., Southern Pines, correspond-
ing sBcrGtsry snd assistant corrG-
sponding secretary. Mrs. Du-
wayne D. Gadd was chairman of
the nominating committee with
Mrs. Harold A. Peck and Mrs.
John E. Dixon.
The meeting, held at Wey
mouth, home of Mrs. James Boyd,
had a full hour of business prior
to the social hour which followed.
Besides the election of officers, a
change in the by-laws, the award
ing of pins, bars and certificates
for volunteers, and reports from
all committee chairmen were on
the afternoon program.
With the reading of the min
utes by Mrs. William H. Wads
worth, several important and nec
essary changes in the by-laws,
which were recommended at a
board meeting, were explained
by Mrs. Dana. At the conclusion,
the auxiliary voted for the
changes as written.
Mrs. Rigby gave a detailed ac
count of receipts and disburse
ments for the past year .in the
treasurer’s report.
Reporting on last week’s Hos-
nital Roundup, staged at the
Southern Pines Armory as one of
the main fund-raising events,
Mrs. Fred C. Pollard read a let
ter from the general chairman of
the dance, Mrs. James Tufts of
Pinehurst. In expressing appreci
ation to all the women through
out this area who worked so tire
lessly for the event, Mrs. Tufts
said. “While we cannot consider
the Hospital Roundup a large fi
nancial success, it was neverthe
less very gratifying to find the
interest shown amoung the mem
bers of our hospital community
in this endeavor. We had wonder
ful support from Carthage, West
End, Aberdeen, Robbins, Raeford,
Southern Pines and Pinehurst.
The good will incurred does have
its value and for future benefits,
I know we can count on many
new friends for support.’
Mrs. Duwayne D. Gadd, chair
man of the Dunes Club dance
given earlier in the Spring, re
ported a net profit of $2601.61
The auxiliary purchased
$1711.31 in much needed equip
ment for the hospital last year-
one suite patient room furniture;
resuscitator for colored nursery,
oxygen analyzer for nursery and
Stryker turning frame. Mrs. John
R Burr, special projects chair
man, reported on these purchases
which will unquestionably make
possible better patient care.
A Hot Pack Steri-Warmer for
the Nursery, which has a 24-bot
tle capacity for heating formula
bottles, was purchased ty Mrs.
Alex Roberts and Mrs. Stuart
Patterson of the volunteer advi
sory committee. Another was
needed at this time, but the com
mittee felt it could not go to fur
ther expense this year, as the
Auxiliary had already made
substantial commitment to the
hospital fund-raising.
Mrs Edward Schneider, whose
favorite project is the Auxiliary’s
Birthday Club, said that many
needed improvements had been
made in the Nurses’ Home last
year, expenses for same totaling
$322.’86. Among them were new
carpet and padding, painting en
trance hall and sanding and re
finishing floors and several small
er items.
The auxiliary has 245 paid
members, 10 of them new this
year, according to Mrs. Lawrence
Johnson, membership chairman.
There are 86 volunteer members,
111 associate and 48 contributing.
Mrs. Robert McMillan, chair
man of the volunteers, spoke of
the many new services her work
ers have instituted during the
past year. Among them are the
visitor’s control desk; the floater,
who works for Physical Therapy
lab, fills in where needed and
also delivers the suggestion let
ters to the patients; ministerial
service; home ladies, who do all
types of hand work in their
homes when it is difficult for
them to come to the hospital; Girl
Scouts push the cart and work
one afternoon a week in the linen
room. A total of 9,317% hours of
volunteer work was done last
year—1,569 more hours than the
preceding year. Mrs. McMillan
and her sub-chairmen, Mrs. Har
old Peck, Mrs. Leon Seymour and
Mrs. Alex Roberts will try for
10,000 hours next year.
Mrs. L. D. Guin and Mrs. Drew-
ry Troutman reported an excep
tionally healthy financial shape
for the canteen under its new
managership. New products have
been added and much stress put
on good service to the customers.
Mrs. Dana read a report frorn
Mrs. Boyd on Maternal Welfare,
stating that Tag Day throughout
the county would be held Satur
day, May 12.
Duncan McGoogan, hospital ad
ministrator, a special guest of the
ladies, expressed his appreciation
for all the work accomplished by
the organization and its tireless
volunteers. He presented the
awards for the year, which in
cluded pins, bars, stars and cer
tificates.
Mrs. Stuart Patterson and Mrs.
John Burr served punch at the
social hour. Assisting Mrs. Mul
ford Horr, who had charge of the
tea, were Mrs. Mangum Webb,
Mrs. Charles Phillips, Mrs. Norris
Hodgkins, Jr., Mrs. William Hol
lister, Mrs. Paul Butler and Mrs.
Lament Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wilder of Ra
leigh were visitors here Tuesday
with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Rounds
at 380 East Pennsylvania Avenue.
Here’s what the
CHARLOTTE NEWS
says about John P. Kennedy:
“Kennedy showed his per
sonal ability in the minimum
wage fight... . and the 66-36
vote indicates it.”
(Julian Scheer) May 18,1961
Elect
John P.
KENHEOr
Democratfor
Congress
Paid for by Kennedy for CongreM Cemntitiet
NOW IN PAPERBACK
The Rise and Fall of The Third
Reieh — 1.65
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