Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Sept. 1, 1963, edition 1 / Page 14
Part of The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page 6-B j?* !'gyP§!*V vX-- .J^^W^Sg»-etg V- l' ■ SVa^&iEMSWfcMI IJwßgßs*. < ■ ;*' ' oPs* • f§S^^*ripi k- ?^' ., » <&*s. I V&MSSfc t 1 WMS&* ■ £"*&* >« 4 m®WMRI Bp. - .»” jfoS?f * Jtf 'J^M Bennett-Howard Vows Are Spoken The wedding of Miss Judith Ben nett, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Bennett of Warm Springs, Ga,, and James Howard, son of Mr., and Mrs. Ralph Howard of Carrboro, took place on August 25th. The Rev. Leonard Mayhew per formed the cermcny at 5:30 p.m. in the Warm Springs Founda tion Chapel which was decorated in white and green with white tapers in tall candelabra on each side of the altar. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white peau de soie with a chapel train. Her veil, hand-made in Panama, was floor-length man tilla of imported illusion net, ap pliqued with chantiliy lace. Her flowers were white stephanotis centred with a white orchid. Miss Susan Bennett, maid of honor, wore a floor-length dress of white mousseline de soie and a wide white net tat. She car ried yellow ’mums. Mr. Howard's best man was r Come And See Us at The Little Shop > FALL AIT CUSS SCWIIU JADE HASLEI GALLERY 113 WEST FRANKLIN STREET REGISTRATION SEPTEMBER 9 through SEPEMBER 27 CLASSES BEGIN SEPTEMBER 30 y Day Time Class Teacher Dates Monday .10:00-12:00 aTm,| Adults | Painting & Drawing | Nancy McMillan | 9730-12 2 Monday 3:30-5:00 P.M.J Teens | General Art | Jane Haalem ~j 9/30-12 2 Monday 8:00-10 :6o P.M.J Adults j Beginning Art John Gordon | 9/3CKI2/2 Tuesday 8:00-10-:OO P.M. | Adults j Oil Painting j Jane Haslem | 16/1-12 3 Thursday 3 ;3fr5:00 P.M. | Teens | General Art | Jane Haslem | 10/3-12/5 Thursday 8:00-10:00 P.M. | Adults | Advanced Art—Figure Drawing ! John Gordon | 10/3-1275 Saturday 10:00-12:o0 A.M. | Children! General Art | Nancy FEE: $20.00 PER 10 LESSONS—MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE Plus art supplies—All students may purchase supplies at discount at Gallery Edwin Brown of Norfolk, Va. His ushers were Gene Shuford and Robert Miller of Chapel Hill. The organist was Miss Virginia Taylor of Manchester, Ga. Guest soloist was the bride’s close friend. Miss Helen Price of Sa vannah, Ga. The bride’s mother wore a dress of turquoise color and the groom’s mother chose a dress of rose lace with a matching hat. Following the ceremony, Dr. and Mrs. Bennett entertained the wedding guests at a reception in Huntington House on the Foun dation. Miss Susan Howard, the bridegroom’s sister, kept the bride's book, and Miss Marjorie Howard, another sister, served the wedding cake which had been cut with a family heirloom knife loaned for the occasion by the bridegroom’s grandmother, Mrs. Harvey Underwood. Following a wedding trip to Florida, Mr. and Mrs. Howard will make their home in Chapel Hill. Carrboro Personals MRS. MARY HOLLINGSWORTH Mrs. Rosa Clark has been dis charged fron Memorial Hospital, having undergone major surgery several weeks ago. She is much improved. • * • Mr. and Mrs. Harold Clark and children, Lynn and H. L., and Mr. and Mrs. Carney Joe Clark and children vacationed at Wrightsville Beach last week end. a a • Mrs. Robert Cheek and Mrs. Ann Hewitt and children vaca tioned at Myrtle Beach recently. a • • Mrs. Blanche Anderson is slow ly improving at home after un dergoing major surgery at Me morial Hospital. • * • Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Friddle and children of Greensboro have movpd to Florence. Alabama, where Mr. Friddle has accepted a position. Mrs. Friddle is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dew ard Pepper and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Bradshaw. * * * Mrs. Sallie Blake is at home following major surgery at Watts Hospital. She is improving. • * • Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Boyd and Mrs. J. J. Glosson of CaiTboro, Mrs. Lucy Huskey of Chapel Hill, Mrs. Lina Boyd of Durham, and Dale Crozi of Raleigh have returned from a vacation at Car olina Beach. • * 0 Hie Gleaners Sunday School Class held its regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Mary Frances Riggsbee Tues day evening. Mrs. Alma Todd had charge of the devotional and spoke on “Gratitude.” After a business session, refreshments of homemade ice cream and cake and coffee were served. Among those present were Mrs. Riggsbee, the hostess, Mrs. Al ma Todd, Mrs. Pauline Har ward, Mrs. Frances Latta, Mrs. Joy Neville and Mrs. Mary Hol lingsworth. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Riggs bee and children, Bart and Todd, of Asheboro were weekend visi tors of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Lat ta. Mrs. Latta is Mr. Riggsbee’s mother. « • * Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Moody and children, Allen and Donna, of Rekteville were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Harvard. • * * Mrs. L. . Jordon of Hillsboro and Mrs. Mary Hollingsworth va cationed recently at Myrtle Beach. • • * Hie Carrboro Baptist Church will hold Open House Sunday, September th, from 3 until 5 p.m. in observance of the com pletion of the educational build ing which has been under con struction for the past several months. Visitors will be met at the door by a member of the building committee and guided through the various rooms. Re freshments will be served by members of two Sunday school classes, the Fidelis and the Gleaners. Hie public is cordially invited to attend. The pastor of the church is Rev. Calvin Rains, to whan much of the work should be credited. * • • Mrs. Shirley Bowden entered the National Institute of Health Hospital, Bethesda 14, Maryland, Thursday. She will undergo ma jor heart surgery this coming week. She will be able to receive mail at the address listed above. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY - I I I B _ - Merritt-Lewis Wedding Held Here Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Merritt of Chapel Hill announce the mar riage of their daughter, Rebecca Lou, to Ronel Lee Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Lewis of Durham. The double-ring cere mony was performed Saturday afternoon in the University Meth odist Church. The Rev. Clyde G. McCarver officiated. The church was decorated with a large central arrangement of white summer flowers against a background of emerald foliage and white tapers in wrought-iron candelabra. Nuptial music was provided by Edward Stryker of Chapel Hill, organist, and Miss Ann Grovenstern of Maxton, har pist. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of pure silk organza fashion ed with a scooped neckline, and a bell-shaped skirt with a de tachable full court train accented by a flat bow. Her three-tiered finger-tip veil of silk illusion was attached to an organza petal cor one. She carried a bouquet of white roses, stephanotis, and ivy. Matron of honor was Mrs. W. E. Merrit Jr. of Elizabeth City, sister-in-law of the bride, who wore a street-length sheath of orchid silk-organza. Her head dress was a matching cabbage rose with a pouff veil. She car ried a nosegay of Golden Shasta chrysanthemums and ivy. Bridesmaids were Miss Betty Lewis of Durham, sister of the groom; Mrs. Donald Parker of Woodland, cousin of the bride; Misses Jane Graham, Trudy Wil liams, and Jacqueline Green wood, all of Chapel Hill. Their gowns were like that of the hon or attendant. Best man was L. R. Lewis, were Tim Merritt of Chapel Hill, father of the bridegroom. Ushers and W. E. Merritt Jr. of Eliza beth City, brothers of the bride; Guy Byrd of Spartanburg, S. C.; Joe Martin of Durham, and Kearney Andrews of Chapel Hill. For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Merritt chose a strength dress of pale pink Chantilly lace with matching accessories. The bridegroom’s mother wore a street-length dress of mauve pink brocade with matching acces sories. Both mothers wore cor sages of lavender orchids. Following the ceremony, the parents of the bride held a re ception in the church’s Fellow ship Hall. Assisting were Mrs. Bernard Boyd, Mrs. Robert Wil kinson, Mrs. Wallace Williams, Mrs. Ronald Sowers, Mrs. James Steagall, Mrs. J. E. Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Graham, Mrs. Joseph Collie, Miss Barbara Sturdevant .Miss Susan Erick son, and Mrs. Mary Henley. For a wedding trip to the Poco no Mountains of Pennsylvania, the bride wore a two-piece cos tume of green-and-gold linen with matching accessories. Her corsage was an orchid. The bride will graduate from the University here in January with an AB degree in elementary education. The bridegroom is a graduate of Davidson College where he received a BS degree in chemistry and biology. He is a member of Kappa Alpha and Alpha Epsilon Delta. He is a first-year student in Bowman Gray School of Medicine at Win ston-Salem. The newlyweds will make their home in Winston-Salem. Long Will Preach At United Church The Rev. William Long will lead the 11 a.m. service of morn ing worship today at the United Church, 211 West Cameron Ave nue. The Communion medita tion will be ‘•Lest We Forget.” The Church School classes will resume activities for the fall September 8. School age chil dren are invited to the services of worship; however, during the hymn before the sermon children of the first four grades may go to the Fellowship Hall for a sup ervised play hour. United Church is a member of the United Church of Christ, which unites the Evangelical and Reformed Church and the Con gregational Christian Church. All are welcomed to the Church’s hour of worship. EASTGATE OFFICERS Charles Alexander has been elected chairman of the board and president of the Eastgatte Merchants Association, succeed ing Billy Arthur. -Mr. Arthur was elected secretary-treasurer, succeeding Mrs. Adger Wilson. Other members of the board are Ben Courts, manager of Mann’s Drugs, and A. K. Bailey, man ager of Wood's. Read the Weekly classified ads. Use The Weekly Classified Ads . . . They work around the ! dock for you. New Hope Community News By Mrs. Sam Ray Homer F. Lucas 111 of Salis bury returned to his home today after spending the week with his > grandmother, Mrs. Homer F. Lu cas Sr., at her home. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Kirkland and children visited “Tweetsie” Railroad at Blowing Rock last week, and other places in the mountains of Western North Carolina. * « • Belated birthday greetings to Miss Pam Dodson, Henry Wil son and Charles Brown. • • « Tommy Lockhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Lockhart, has re turned home from Camp Han over, Richmond, Va., where he spent a week. * * * Steve Mauer, son of Ml. and Mrs. Herman Mauer and .grand son of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Mauer of the community, is recovering from a broken arm. * * * Mrs. Kelly Davis and son, Mrs. Sam Ray and son, Peter Fudge and Homer F. Lucas IH of Sal isbury, spent last Tuesday in the North Carolina mountains. * * • Also visiting in the mountains last week were Miss Elizabeth Cecil and the Misses’ Delores and Geneieve Dodson. * * * z' * Mrs. W. Y. Yeargan of Atlan ta, Ga., is visiting at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Brown. * * * Vernon Ray has returned home from Rock Hill, S, C., where he • visjted his sister, Mrs. Johnny Gainey, and her family for more than two weeks. • * • Weekend visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ray and son were Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ray of Hillsboro. Mrs. Olga Bober Exhibits Painting The paintings of Mrs. Olga Bober of Chapel Hill will be on exbibit in the North Gallery of the Morehead Planetarium dur ing September. Mrs. Bober has painted in va rious locations while following her husband, a visiting professor. Her art is the product of an in tense dedication to serious self expression in a difficult medium. Ranging from an exploration of abstract styles to less novel and more familiar problems of still life, portraiture and allegorical figure compositions, Mrs. Bober brings to her subjects a conser vative but rich insight into the power of color which expresses emotions in front of nature. She has exhibited at Milwau kee, Madison, Appleton, Green bay and Oshkosh, Wisconsin, but this will be her first exhibition in North Carolina. The Morehead Building is open from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7:30 to 10 p.m. on weekdays, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 to 10 p.m. on Sundays. There is no charge for admis sion to the exhibit galleries. Univ. Baptist Will Hear Chaplain Reid Chaplain Fred W. Reid of North Carolina Memorial Hospital will be the guest speaker at the 11 a.m. Worship Service of Univer sity Baptist Church. He bas chosen “Faith and Tension” as his topic. The Chancel Choir, under the direction of Mrs. W. C. Burris, will sing “Grant Me Hue Cour age, Lord” by Bach and “Savior, Like a Shepherd Lead Us” by Gluck. Mrs. Crawford L. Tay lor Jr., will be at the organ. In the absence of the pastor, the Rev .William H. Hertford, associate minister, will preside. REAPPOINTED Governor Terry Sanford has announced the reappointment of Dr. H. G. Baity of the Univer sity faculty here to the State Board of Examiners of Heating and Plumbing Contractors, for a term expiring April 25, 1970. osacoswili IV (i "HIFIATWS OUTOOOt HA VIM" gjam jaaaaa. Wtii liSMH the ltd - ipgr ML ; i* , V Folger-Crutchfield Vows Exchanged Miss Jane Folger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Coke Fol ger of Point, exchanged marriage vows with Pvt. Benja min Franklin Crutchfield Jr. at noon yesterday in the chapel of High Point's Memorial Methodist Church. The bridegroom is the son of the senior Crutchfields of Chapel Hill. E>r. J. G. Huggin and the Rev. Ben F. Potter Jr. of Chapel Hill officiated in the single-ring cere mony. . Mrs. Charles McAnally, organist, provided music. Sole (jecorations in the chapel were altar arrangements of red, orange, and gold garden flowers. Given in marriage by tar fath er, the brkfe wore a street-length dress of light ivory peau de soie, featuring a scoop neckline, short sleeves, and details of re-em broidered Alencon lace on the bodice and skirt. Her abbreviat ed veil was attached to a modi fied coronet. She carried a nose gay of roses, tuberoses, and fern. Miss Ruth Folger, her sister’s attendant, wore antique gold peau de soie with a matching pillbox hat. She carried a nose gay of black-eyed susans tied with brown velvet ribbon. Miss Betty Neal registered guests, after the ceremony. Mr. Crutchfield Sr. was his son's best man. Ushers were Hen ry Gibbons Ruark Jr. of Rocky Mount and William Preston Tug gle II of Portsmouth, Virginia, brother-in-law of the bride. The bridal mothers wore matching corsages of hibiscus. Mr. and Mrs. Folger and Mr. and Mrs. Crutchfield Sr. were hosts at an informal reception at the Folger borne following the wedding. Mrs. Crutchfield Jr. attend ed High Point city schools, UNC at Greensboro, and UNC at Chapel Hill, where she received an A. B. degree in French Edu cation. She spent the past year jP&Ball jinlkm SHOP CLOSED AUGUST 19TH TO SEPT. 3RD. GIFTS Will have shipment of new stock in at that time. Also several spacious rooms of 18th and 19th d century furniture, china, old silver, and ob- srfMl jocts cf art at Chapel Hill’s original antique and gift shop. ms E. Franklin, Chapel HUI • 1:30 Is 5:30 Daily Vm* dl Sunday, September 1,1963 studying in France on a Ful bright grant. The bridegroom was educated in Chapel Hill and graduated from UNC with an A. B. degree in French. He had begun work toward an M. A. degree in teach ing before entering the Army. He is now stationed at the Army Security Agency School at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, where he will graduate in November. The couple will be at home in Boston. ORANGE METHODIST “Enlightened Faith Or Prim itive Cannibalism?” will be the Rev. David B. Lewis’s sermon topic at the 11 a.m. service to day at Methodist Church, Sunday school starts at 10 a.m. and Methodist Youth Fellowship will meet at 5:30. WATCH REPAIR Precision craftsmanship by our experts insures your complete satisfaction with all our watch repair*. PROMPT SERVICE WENTWORTH I SLOAN JEWELERS 167 E. Franklin St. Phone 942-4469
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1963, edition 1
14
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75