THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1962
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page FIVE
Women's Activities
and Sandhills Social Events
MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE OX 2-6512
The Richard James
Family Moves Here
From Nearby Robbins
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Janies
and daughters, Mary Lee, 12 and
Cathy Ann, 10, this week moved
from Robbins to the house at 275
North May Street which they are
leasing from owner Frank Love-
joy-
A native of Robbins, Mr. James
has been associated with Ken
nedy & Company Real Estate &
Insurance firm in Pinehurst since
1960.
A 1950 graduate of Catawba
College, where he earned an AB
degree in commerce, Mr. James
was with Amerotron (the old
Robbins Mill) from 1950-55. He
then became associated with the
Shenandoah Life Insurance Com
pany, with home offices in Roan
oke, Va. and he remains their
representative, working out of
the Raleigh district.
The Jameses are Pnssbyterians,
members of Brownson Memorial
Church, where he teaches the
Young People’s Sunday School
class. His wife is active in Girl
Scouting, both on the troop and
management levels.
Their daughters will attend the
local school.
Par Seekers Hold
Monthly Luncheon
Meet After Tourney
Fourteen Par Seekers attended
the group’s monthly luncheon and
business meeting Wednesday at
the Southern Pines Country Club.
The low net tournament played
by the Par Seekers that morning
was won by Mrs. Robert Strouse.
Runner-up was Mrs. T .C. Worth,
Jr.
Last Wednesday’s tourney, a
blind hole contest, was won by
Mrs. W. Lamont Brown.
United Church Lists
Meetings; ^^omen’s
Circles to Meet
On Sunday, September 9th, the
Rev. Carl Wallace will preach on
the sermon theme: “The Christi
an Conununity and Sins of the
Flesh” at the II a. m. worship
service at the United Church of
Christ.
The Youth Fellowship will hold
their reorganizational meeting at
6 p. m. Sunday.
On Wednesday, the junior choir
meets at 7 p. m., the senior choir
at 8 p- HI- as dees the Board of
Trustees.
The Circles of the Women’s
Fellowship will meet Thursday,
September 13, with the following
members:
The Fanny Timmons Circle at
10 a. m., with Mrs. James Covey.
The Friendship Circle at 3 p. m.
with Mrs. Ella Chatfield.
The Lena Sweezy Circle at 3
p. m., with Mrs. Jack Reid.
The Margaret White Circle at
3 p. m., with Mrs. Wade Stevick.
The Ruth Burr Sanborn Circle
at 8 p. m., with Mrs. Robert Le-
land.
VFW and Auxiliary
Entertain l3isabled
Veterans Here Friday
Disabled veterans from the VA
Hospital in Fayetteville were en
tertained Friday fjy the John
Boyd Post 7318 Veterans of For
eign Wars at the post home on
N. W. Broad Street.
Twenty-six old-timers arrived
here at 2 p.m. by charter bus with
recreation director, Carl White,
in charge.
The group was greeted on ar
rival by Commander Joe Gar-
zik and Auxiliary President, Miss
Louise Crain.
The post home was attractively
decorated with poppies and ivy.
The men were served refresh
ments of milk, ice cream and
home made cup cakes by Auxili
ary members Miss Louise Crain,
Mrs. Elinor Irvin, Mrs. Cecile
Cameron, Miss Jewel Johnson
and Mrs. Trudy Stephenson, as
sisted by Mrs. Elsie Dawson and
Miss Marie Meyer.
During the afternoon, the
group enjoyed the fine piano
playing of Miss Ruth Wilson.
In and Out of Town
Dick James
about this question:
“IN THESE DAYS when we
are often beset with tensions
of many kinds, it seems to me
we should concentrate more
than ever on the things which
help build up oUr strength as
individuals.
“One of the most fundament
al of these, to my way of
thinking, is life insurance.
Here is a form of individual
planning by which a man can,
insofar as it is humanly possi
ble, exercise control over his
own future and that of those he
loves.
“Actually, the whole purpose
of life insurance is to replace
insecurity with security.
WANT-TO-KNOW-MORE
CALL - NOW
KENNEDY
Insurance Agency
Phone 294-2752 PINEHTOST
Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Weather-
spoon and son,, Carlyle, of 105
Youngs Road, will attend the
Weatherspoon-Nicholson wedding
this Sunday at Grace’s Chapel
near Sanford. Carlyle will serve
as aii usher in his cousin’s wed
ding. Miss Ruby Seagroves of Ra
leigh will spend the weekend
with the Weatherspoons and will
accompany them to the wedding.
Mr: and Mrs. James Pleasants
drove their son, Rodney to Rome,
Ga. on the weekend. He will be
a student this year at the Dar
lington School for Boys.
Returning home Sunday fol
lowing two weeks in the ^orge
Leonard cottage at Myrtle Beach,
S. C. were Dr. and Mrs. R. M.
! McMillan and children, John,
] Mary, Julia and Robert. John and
jBill Seymour left here Sunday
I for Middletown, Conn. where
they will attend the Saturday
wedding of Bill’s brother, John,
to Katherine Angela Spooner.
Tho boys are visiting friends on
the'wfty up:* ‘ ’
Mrs. Walter Harper and daugh
ter, Clara, got home Tuesday
after a trip to New Jersey to pick
up Frances Harper, Tim Leonard,
Faye Reid and Betsy Scheipers,
who have all been working for the
George Pottles this summer at
the Shoreham Hotel in Spring
Lake. En route, Mrs. Harper and
Clara visited Mr. Harper’s sister
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Gar
land Chewning in Deltaville, Va.,
then on to Philadelphia, Pa. for a
stopoff with her sister, Mrs. Dun
can McRae, her husband and
their small daughter and new lit
tle boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cam
eron spent the past weekend at
Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Black from a short vacation at
Myrtle Beach, S. C. are Dr. and
Mrs. C. Robert VanderVoort.
Th-sir children; Glory, Kathie and
Robert, visited her parents. Dr.
and Mrs. E. M. Medlin in Aber
deen.
Mrs. S. D. Fobes and daughter,
Arden, have just returned from
a 10-day trip. They drove Cadet
Gary Page of Winston-Salem to
the U. S. Military Academy at
West Point, N. Y. then went on
to Saranac Lake, visited relatives
in Montclair, N. J. and spent the
weekend in New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe C. Thomas
and Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Woolley
spent the weekend at Camp Rain
bow, Boone, attending the annual
- %
*4 ''
■U
FIVE REASONS
WHY...
YOUR MONEY
BUYS MORE
IN A REAL
DRUG STORE
Complete, fresh drug stocks
<beyond what is carried by
nondru^ outlets)
Values on drug and related
products that are the main
part of our business (not
a ^"sideline” as in non-
drug outlets)
Professional services of a
trained pharmacist and'
trained salespeople
Prompt Service at any time
of the day or night in any
emergency
As fhdependent business
men. we take an active
interest in the community
we serve
DRUGS
pXjON—
Main Street Aberdeen, N. C.
Labor Day outing for the Allied
Masonic Degree members and
ther families of North Carolina,
Mrs. John D. Sullivan and
daughter, Kathleen who spent the
month of August visiting rela
tives in Philadelphia, Pa. and
Wildwood, N. J., got home last
week. Mr. Sullivan and their oth
er daughter, Mary Ann, drove
north to get Mrs. Sullivan and
Kathleen.
Mrs. Rachel Tague Weston of
Farmington, Maine, has come to
Jefferson Inn for the winter as a
guest and an employee. Mrs. Wes
ton lived in Southern Pines the
winters of 1947 to 1953. She will
be glad to see her old friends.
Mrs. George Burns and her
mother, Mrs. Charles Loup spent
the Labor Day weekend at
Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Sunday visitors with Mrs.
Warren Smith were the Rev. and
Mrs. E. L. Barber of Raleigh. The
Rev. Mr. Barber was the first
pastor of Brownson Memorial
Presbyterian Church.
The Howard Butlers and their
son, Dan, are back at their Wey
mouth Heights home after a
weekend visit in Blowing Rock.
Susan Pollard expects to return
next week to Greensboro College
for her sophomore year.
Miss Nancy Jo Traylor of New
Bern spent the Labor Day week
end here wiht her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Don F. Traylor, Jr. and
her sisters. Nancy Jo has recent
ly returned after a two week trip
to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Is
lands. Also visiting the Traylors
and daughter, Becky for the
weekend was Keith Anderson of
Middleport, Ohio. Becky returns
Monday to Lees-McRae College.
Nancy Jo and a guest, Lt. Walter
Hoyle of the Cherry Point Ma-
rin.3 Base, will be here over this
coming weekend.
Maj. and Mrs. James Cannon
of Ft. Banning, Ga. visited Mrs.
Cannon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel A. Obitz, for the past
week at their new home on Boil
ing Springs Circle. 'They brought
their two young sons, Michael
and Mark to enjoy the spacious
wooded area. Mr. and Mrs. Obitz
are formerly from Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hartshorne
spent the Labor Day weekend at
the Grove Park Inn, Asheville.
Her sister. Miss Ruth McFarland
of Asheville joined them at the
Inn for the weekend.
Doctor and Mrs. Irving Sosen-
sky and their daughter, Jennifer,
have spent the past 10 days with
Mrs. Sosensky’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. Hilderman. Dr. Sosen-
sky is on the faculty of Purdue
University in West Lafayette,
Ind. Miss Helen Hilderman of
Durham was also with her par
ents during the same period, and
Dr. and Mrs. Walter C. Hilder
man and their three children,
Walter, Ann, and John, spent
Sunday at Pine Cone Lodge.
Mrs. Donald G. Case returned
Monday to her Morganton Road
home following three weeks with
her son, Don, Jr. and his family.
They spent two weeks at Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. and Mrs. Case
then drove with them to Atlanta,
Ga. for another week.
Mrs. Wayland Blue is spending
two weeks with her sister and
brother-in-law;, Lt. Comdr. and
Mrs. William Goewey at Oxon
Hill, Md.
The J. William Blues and their
three children spent the Labor
Day weekend at the Catawba
River near Charlotte.
MR. AND MRS. RICHARD LEE STYERS
MISS QUINN, MR. STYERS, WED IN
MANLY SATURDAY, WILL LIVE HERE
Miss Donna Lee Quinn Satur
day became the bride of Richard
Lee Styers in an afternoon cere
mony in Manly Presbyterian
Church. She is the daughter of
Mrs. D. G. Castro and J. W.
Quinn of Poquason, Va. His par
ents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sty
ers of Aberdeen.
The Rev. Donald Maconaghie
performed the double ring cere
mony. Mrs. Frank Swaim played
the piano and Melvin Williams
sang.
Given in marriage by her step
father, the bride wore a gown of
Chantilly lace and pure silk with
sweetheart neckline outlined in
sequins and seed pearls, fitted
bodice, tapered sleeves and bouf
fant skirt with basque waist. She
carried a white prayerbook top
ped with a white orchid and
stephanotis.
Miss Linda Edwards, maid of
honor, wore a pink brocade
sheath dress with bouffant skirt
and matching headdress and car
ried a nosegay of pink carnations.
The other attendants, the
bride’s cousin Miss Becky Mar
tin and the bridegroom’s sister.
Miss Frankie Swaim, wore iden
tical gowns of blue brocade and
carried blue carnation nosegays.
The bridegroom’s father was
his* best man. Ushers were Fred
die Styers, the groom’s brother,
Charles Gillis, the bride’s cousin
of Rockingham; Martin Green
and Alton Monroe, Jr., uncle of
the bride.
A reception followed in the
church’s recreation hall. After a
wedding trip to Myrtle Beach, the
couple will reside in Southern
Pines.
Both the bride and her husband
are graduates of the Aberdeen
High School. She is employed by
Commuting in Sandhills
Pleasure Say Newcomers
Here From Long Island
Newcomers to the Sandhills are
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Katavolos who
moved Monday into the Richard
Earle place on East Rhode Island
Avenue Extension.
They came here from Garden
City, Long Island. Mr. Katavolos
is managing the Rockingham
Mills where he commutes daily.
‘'Commuting here is nothing
like commuting in New York,”
said Mrs. Katavolos; “here it is a
pleasure.”
They have twin daughters, 12
year olds Mary Lee and Diana
Joan, who are in the seventh
grade at the Southern Pines
School.
Luther League Members
C^ing To Fayetteville
Members of the Luther League,
young people’s organization of
Our Saviour Lutheran Church,
will go to Fayetteville late Sun
day afternoon to be guests of the
Luther League of St. James Luth
eran Church there for supper
and following activities.
The Rev. Jack Deal, pastor, and
other adults from the local church
will accompany the group. Qur
Saviour Church has a membership
of 20 in its Luther League con
sisting of Intermediate members,
aged 11-13, and Senior members,
aged 14-18.
Trimble Products, Inc. and Mr.
Styers, by the Aberdeen Coca-
Cola Bottling Co.
Rehearsal Party
Mrs. Ralph Martin, the bride’s
aunt, entertained for members of
the wedding party after the re
hearsal at her home on Oak
Drive.
Pat Starnes Starts
Seventh Year of
Dance Instruction
Teens and adults will have a
chance to brush up on dancing or
to begin learning the art of
terpshicore when Pat Starnes be
gins her seventh year of dance
instruction here next week.
The 10-week course for adults
begins Tuesday, September 11, at
the Southland Hotel; teens will
have classes beginning Friday,
September 14, in the student
lounge of the Southern Pines
School.
Interested persons should call
Pat (Mrs. Boyd) Starnes at 695-
5493.
At the conclusion of the course,
which includes instruction in fox
trot, waltz, rhumba, cha-cha,
rock ’n roll and tango, teens wili
celebrate with their annual formal
dance at the Wedge Inn on Mid
land Road. Adults will celebrate
their “graduation” at one of the
local holiday dances.
KEEP UP WITH LATE
VALUES IN PILOT ADS
Young Republican
Club Organized
Organization of a Young Re
publican Club for lower Moore
County was completed Tuesday
night at the Southland Hotel
with election of these officers for
the group: Steve Van Camp, pres
ident; Ruth Wells, vice president
and Mary Harrington, secretary
and treasurer.
Open to persons 17 to 40 years
of age, the club is designed to
bring young people into the Re
publican Party and to provide an
opportunity for them to become
active in politics and to gain a
better understanding of party
principles.
Meetings will be held on the
second Tuesday of each month at
8 p. m.
Present for the meeting were
two candidates for Moore County
offices in the November election,
Wallace O’Neal of Pinehurst, for
county commissioner; and Mrs.
Donna Spence of Pinebluff, for
register of deeds.
New Heir-Rivals
DOUGLAS McRAE
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McRae of
Philadelphia are the parents of
their first son, Douglas, born
August 24. Their daughter, Ellen
Wilcox, is three years old. Mrs.
McRae is the former Amelia Wil
cox, a sister of Mrs. Walter F.
Harper of 440 South Kensington
Road.
WILL YOU BE AT MY
PRE - OPENING SALE
NOW GOING ON?
YOU SHOULD!
Absolute Clearance
33V3% and 50% off
And More
Summer Dresses
Wool and Street Dresses
Cocktail Dresses
Sports Dresses
Wool Suits
Negligees
All Sales Final
JVIRGINIA DAVIS LANDIS,
^ Village Court Building
PINEHURST, N. C. Allf CONDITIONEDlj
Franciscan Earthenware
POPPYTRAIL SALE
SEPT. 10 - 22
The American Style in Dinneneare
fAnmueii
House&(}anien
4-PIECE PLACE SETTINGS IN;
California Ivy $3.95
California Provincial __ $3.95
Blueberry Provincial.. $4.95
Red Rooster $3.95
Navajo $3.95
Provincial Fruit $3.95
JEWELERS
ef'/yutker-tv ^ineA, jY}^