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PAGE FOUR
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
iMtiRSito, FEBRUARY 18, 1965
Women's Activities’ ' ‘
and Sandhills Social Events
MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor 'f TELEPHONE 692-6512
New Sandhills
Arrivals Listed
Liddell Associates aiiliounces
the following real estate transac
tions, completed recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Maner E. Sibley
and their four children have
• moved into the home at Sandavis
which they have recently pur
chased. They are from Halifax,
Va., and Mr. Sibley is associated
with Burlington Industries.
After redecorating and remod
eling the house at 1117 Massachu
setts Ave., which they bought
from Mr. and Mrs. William
Frantz, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Williams have about completed
the move to Southern Pines from
Lumberton, their former home.
Mr. Williams is a vice presi
dent of Southern National Bank
and manager of the Southern
Pines branch office.
A lot on Hill and Barber Roads
has been bought by Mr. and Mrs.
John Kesead former residents of
Statesboro, Ga., now living in
Pinehurst. The couple, who have
one son, plan to build soon. Mr.
Kesead is with Karagheusian
A & M, Inc.
Also with Karagheusian is Vin
cent Connolly, who has leased
the Bean house, 115 E. Massa
chusetts Ave. Mrs. Connolly and
the couple’s two daughters, ex
pect to move this weekend from
their former home in Nixon, N. J.
The Charles Thomases, who
have been living on N. Saylor
St., have leased the house at 540
S. Valley Road. Mr. Thomas is
manager of the Holiday Inn. The
couple has a married daughter,
Mrs. Donald Walter, and a grand
son.
Nona Pritchett Is
Sorority Pledge
After a week’s formal “rush
ing,” Miss Nona (Mickey) Pritch
ett has pledged Sigma, Sigma,
Sigma Sorority at East Carolina
College. Only 15 invitations year
ly are issued to this sorority,
which is the oldest house on the i organist.
ECC campus.
A graduate of the Southern
Pines High School, Nona is the
daughter of Mrs. J. U. Pritchett
of Southern Pines, and the late
Colonel Pritchett.
BPO Does Attend
State Meeting
At Wrightsville
At the 15th Annual State Meet
ing of the BPO Does, held at the
Blockade Runner Hotel in
Wrightsville Beach, February 12-
14, Mrs. Mark King was elected
vice president for the 1966
state meeting, to be held in Ra
leigh.
Approximately 100 Does from
various Droves across the state
attended, with Mrs. Ida Walker
of Lake Worth, Fla., presiding.
Local Does and Elks attending
were: Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Bush-
by, Mr. and Mrs. Leland Daniels,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Poe, Mr.
and Mrs. Morris Arnold, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Wallace; Mr. and Mrs.
George Little, Mr. and Mrs. Hu
bert Cameron, George Garde,
Mrs. Mary Grover, Miss Marian
Difatta, Mrs. Mark King, ■ Mrs.
Cliff Johnson, Mrs. Charles
Meares, Mrs. George Thompson,
and Mrs. L. D. McDonald.
MRS. CHARLES WARD
Couple Married Sunday To
Live In Southern Pines
avi
Miss Shirley Joanne Smith and
Charles David Ward wero mar
ried Sunday at Brown^on Me
morial Presbyterian Church
with the pastor. Dr., rfulian Lake,
officiating. Bobby Matthews was
the soloist and William Stokes
ImmediatelylfoRowing the cer
emony, a reception: given by the
bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Smith of Midland Road,
was held ip y(iti%i,cji}ji.rch’s fellow-
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JEWELERS
208 S.W. Broad Street
Sanders Whispering Pines
Restaurant
"Blackie" Sanders, Mgr. « f , -
DINNER DANCIi
Saturday, February 20tlirt
, ’ ''tiiuslc by ,
ROBINSOll COMBO
Hours 9:00 • 1:00
No cover charge for dinner guests
ship hall.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Ward of 145
Valley Road. A graduate of the
Southern Pines High School, Mr.
Ward attended Elon College and
is associated with his father in
his engineering business.
Also a graduate of Southern
Pines High School, and of Fay
etteville Beauty College, the
bride is employed by Norma’s
Beauty Shop.
Given by her father in mar
riage, she wore a gown of peau
de soie with fitted bodice, the
skirt terminating in a chapel
train. Her veil was of flowing il
lusion, attached to a crown of
seed pearls. She carried a white
prayerbook topped with a cas
cade of hyacinths centered with
a white orchid.
The bride’s sister, Mrs. Carolyn
Kidd, her matron of honor, and
the bridesmaids, Mrs. Woodrow
Branch and Mrs. Clellan May,
III, wore floor length gowns of
white crepe and red chiffon, with
empire waistlines and matching
headpieces. The bride’s niece, Jill
Kidd, w<as flower girl.
Mr. Ward’s father was his best
man. Ushers were E. Bi Smith,
brother of the bride, Charles
Watkins, Woodrow Branch and
Clellan D. May, III.
After a wedding trip to t
Eastern part of the state, t
couple will be at home on
Bennett St.
Out-of-town guests attending
the wedding included the Misses
Eda and Irene Custar of Pitts
burgh, Pa., great aunts of the
bridegroom, and Maj. and Mrs.
Neil C. Brayton of ^rt McClel
lan, Ala-, sister and brother-in-
law of the bride.
Pre-Nuptial Courtesies
Following the rehearsal Sat
urday night the wedding party
and guests from out of town
were entertained at a buffet at
the home of the bridegroom’s
parents.
Mrs. Woodrow Branch and Mrs.
Clellan May were hostesses at a
miscellaneous shower for the
prospective bride in the Brown-
son Memorial Church parlor on
January 25. The honoree was
presented with a coronation cor
sage.
Miss Annie Margaret Brewer
honored Miss Smith at a tea on
Wednesday before the wedding.
The guest of honor received a
nosegay bouquet and a cup and
saucer in her chosen pattern of
china.
25 Attend WMU
General Meeting
Mrs. C. Allan McLaughlin,
president of the Women’s Miss
ionary Union of First Baptist
Church, presided over the gener
al meeting, held Tuesday at noon
at the church. Twenty-four meih-
bers and a visitor, Mrs. Charles
Scott, were present for the lunch
eon and business session.
Special emphasis was given to
the Community Mission project.
Mrs. SherriU Rush, Mrs. Harold
Fowler, and Mrs. Norman Caudle
presented the program on Alaska.
Society programs and study
this quarter, the group learned,
will be centered around Home
Mission work of the Southern
Baptist Convention.
The Mission Study Book,
“Winds of Change,” will be taught
in the Circles next week.
The Week of Prayer for Home
Missions will be observed with
prayer services each day, March
8 through 12.
Civic Club Benefit
Party Well Attended
The East Southern Pines Civic
Club benefit card party held Fri
day at the clubhouse was well at
tended, and members were pleas
ed with the amount of proceeds,
which will be turned over to
Camp Easter in the Pines, the
summer camp for crippled chil
dren, located outside Southern
Pines.
Winners at bridge and other
card games were: Mrs. T. H.
Dahn, Mrs. R. M. McMillan, Mrs.
J. D. Sitterson, Miss Blanchette
Capped, Mrs. W. L. Baker, Mrs.
Mildred Miller, Mrs. Harry Men-
zel, Mrs. Avery Evans.
Also, Mrs. Dewey Floyd, Mrs.
T. C. Ringgold, Mrs. Ralph Hoyle,
Mrs. L. B. Creath, Mrs. Lawrence
Kempf Mrs. Walter Sargeant,
Mrs. Madeline Brown, Miss
Helen Butler, Mrs. George Little,
Miss Alice Carlson, Mrs. H. W.
Allen, Mrs. Elizabeth Lockwood,
Mrs. R. H. Babb and Mrs. John
G. Mock.
HUNTING ‘BRASS’ — Formal attire for
huntsmen and their wives was in order at the
Hunt Ball at Whispering Pines Saturday night.
Pictured' are masters of two prominent North
Carolina Hunt clubs—at right, W. Ozell Moss,
MFH of the Moore County Hounds; the other
gentleman is William Boren, Master of the
Sedgefield Hunt. His wife is seated across the
table from him. Next to Mr. Boren is Mrs.
Robert Carter. HI; whose husband was MFH of
the now disbanded Groton Hunt. The Carters,
of Centerville, Md., served as judges of the
Hunter Trials Salturday and while here, visited
Miss Betty Dumaine of Pinehurst, who can be
seen at the extreme left in the photograph.
(Humphrey photo)
Miss Tribble, Bride-Elect Of March,
Honored At Informal Reception Here
Miss Virginia Tribble, whose
marriage to Ens. Edward H. Kos-
ter, will be an event of March 13
at Emmanuel Episcopal Church,
was honored at an informal re
ception Monday afternoon at the
home of the Naval officer’s par
ents, Col. and Mrs. Alfred M.
K'oster, on E. Massachusetts Ave.
Sharing the party honors with
Mrs. Koster was the prospective
Hollywood Guests Here
For Golf And Riding
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. But-
kus of Charleston, S. C. are vis
iting Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Steel, and-Mrs. John Steel of
Waukegan, Ill., guests at the Hol
ly wtibd Hotel.
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Blackstock
of New Orleans, La,, here for
golf and riding, are staying at
The Hollywood.
The bingo winners Saturday
night at the Hotel, were Miss
Clara Bell, Mrs. Rufus Sprague,
Mrs. G. E. Blackstock, Mrs. Jane
Reid, Mrs. Monroe Rule, Miss
Langdon Bellows and Mrs. Lou
ise Tobey.
Shaw House, Scene
Of Hunt Breakfast
On February 8, opening day
for the spring season at Shaw
House, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Hurd of Midland Road, enter
tained at luncheon for Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert P. Elliott of Pelham
Manor, N. Y., house guests of the
Robert Heyls of Knollwood.
Other guests included Mrs. New
ton Forbes, Mrs. H. Stagg McKim
and Mr. and Mrs Collier Baird,
all of Pinehurst.
The following day, Mrs. James
W. Sinclair of Warrenton, Va.,
and Mrs. Huntington McLane of
Southern Pines hosted a Hunt
Breakfast for members of the
Moore County Hounds, following
a meeting of the Hounds earlier
that morning.
Sandhills Junior Hunt
Club Members Taught
Equitation By Trainer
Skip Webster, manager and
trainer of Turkey Hollow Farm,
instructed 15 members of the
Sandhills Junior Hunt Club in
various phases of eqiiitation at
the club’s recent meeting in Mrs,
Verdie Caddell’s riding ring.
'The time and place of the next
meeting will be annoimced in a
later issue of The Pilot.
Pancake Luncheon To
Be Shrove Tuesday
At Emmanuel Church
Sausages ’n pancakes—all you
can eat! On Shrove Tuesday,
March 2 between 11 am and 1:30
pm, St. Catherine’s Guild of Em
manuel Church will stage its
fourth annual pancake luncheon
in the church parish hall on East
Massachusetts Ave.
This affair has become increas
ingly attractive and well-receiv
ed over the past three years.
The young women of the guild
hope that those who have attend
ed in the past will do so again
and that there will be many new
comers.
Tickets, priced at 75c for chil
dren and $1.00 for adults, are
available at Barnum Realty &
Insurance, Tot’s Toggery and the
Southern National Bank, or may
be obtained at the door.
bride’s mother, Mrs. Jack H. Te®-
ble of Aberdeen.
Miss Tribble was presented
with a corsage of sweetheart
roses and her mothen' or^,pt
miniature ’mums. '' ’ ’ ’
A sterling bowl of blue iris
centered the tea table, * echoing
the color of the antique blue. and
white Imari porcelain punchb)Me})|l
and Imari Palace plates.
Tall blue tapers lighted the
table, which was laid with a
Chinese lace and embroidered
cloth (in the Army and Navy pat'
tern popular with service fam
ilies who have lived in the Far
East).
Assisting as dining room host
esses were Mrs. Hoke ‘Pollock,
Mrs. Sherwood Brockwell, Mrs.
Charles Phillips and Mrs. Edwiti,
A. McCleur.
' Surprise Shower
Miss Tribble was given a sur
prise kitchen shower by her Spf-^
ority sisters of Beta Upfeilon'
Chapter, of Alpha Delta ' Pi in
Chapel Hill Saturday. The bride-
elect and her parents, the Jack
Tribbles, stopped by the Sorority
House for lunch en route to Dur
ham.
The Alpha Delta Pi House was
decorated in the Valentine motif
and punch and valentine, candy
were served.
JOHN
RUGGLES
■ When you insure your car,,
home, or business through an.
independent agent, you get
support when you need' it. Re
member, an independent agent
serves you first.
As independent agents, we
are proud to display this sym
bol which represents the best
in professional insurance ser
vice. Look for this seal before
you buy insurance—only an
independent agent can display
it.
Barnum Realty 8t Insurance Ca
Southern Pines. If. C.
Cilisens Bank Bldg.
WE ARE INDEPENDENT
AGENTSl
Mrs. Burney Talks On
Grandfather Clocks
At UDC Meeting
The John Blue Chapter of the
United Daughters of the Con
federacy met February 10, at
Sanders Restaurant, Whispering
Pines. The hostesses, Mrs. D. B.
Herring, Mrs. J. D. Arey, Jr.,
Mrs. Will Blue, Mrs. F. S. Weaver,
served the members and one
guset. Miss Ha Blue, delicious re
freshments.
Mrs. H. W. Doub, chaplain led
in the ritual and' the salute to the
flags.
Mrs. C. S. Patch, Sr., president,
heard reports from the different
committees.
After the business session, Mrs.
A. L. Burney introduced Mrs. W.
U. Barefield, who gave a talk oh
“Her Noble Heritage — Grand
father Clocks.
B&PW Club Has
Program On
Public Relations
“Public Relations” will be the
subject under discussion at the
meeting tonight (Thursday) of
the Sandhills Business & Profes
sional Women’s Club, to begin at
7:15 pm with dinner at Doug
Kelly’s Holiday Inn Restaurant.
Idrs. Herman Guthrie will
have charge of the program tell
ing the who, what, when, where,
why formula of a good news
story. The B&PW Club is the
largest and oldest national organ
ization for women who work.
Mrs. G. B. Kimbrell, president
of the Sandhills Club, will pre
side.
PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
' 24 hours a day
Broad Street Pharmacy
Southeirii Pines. N. C.
DAY PHONE 695-5411
Winston Burroughs
Sunday & Night Phone
695-5442
c'
Joe Montesanti. Jr.
Sunday & Night Phone
692-2501
BOOKS FOR FEBRUARY
; LINCOLN'S BIATHDAY
ST. VALENTINE'S DAY 1
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAtjl
WEHAVEraEM
STUDIO BOOKSHOP
105 E. Pennsylvania Ave.
Southern Pines
AS ADVERTISED IN
AAADEMOISEllE
SALAD B0WL14:, I
Betmar greets Spring with this perky
BretotL,of. finely sewn Sgtina S'tiss
straw. Set aff with a gleaming, crispy
'’$13.00
-jfti
Mrs^^ayes Shop
'!SK*L _
^8?3i^outhern Pines