Miss Alice Noble entertained at bridge for Mrs. Pratt Monday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Green have returned from a week in New York.
T.O. Faucett of Raleigh was the guest of the S.J. Brockwells last week.
Mrs. W.W. Wiggins and her children of St. Paul are in Chapel Hill on a visit to relatives.
Clyde Hogan of the Orange Church section has entered State College in Raleigh. His sister, Miss Mary Hogan, is now teaching in Hillsboro.
Miss Helen Parker of Carrboro, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Parker, was married to Edmund Thomas Fussell of Rocky Mount at her home last Sunday. Rev. J.W. Autry performed the ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Bynum are in their home in Westwood after their summer’s vacation.
Mrs. E.T. Browne and her daughter are at home again.
Mrs. Della Clark Battle is in Raleigh visiting her sister for a few days.
Miss ElizabethCooley of Trenton, New Jersey, is living in Chapel Hill. She is in the extension division of the library.
Mrs. A.W. Mangum and her son, Bill, left last week for their home in Franklin after a visit to Miss Ettie Mangum.
Mrs. Fred Pattersongave a bridge party Tuesday morning.
Mrs. C.E. Correll and her family have moved into the new Pollard apartment house at the east end of Franklin street.
Mrs. Henry Cheek of the Mount Carmel section is ill in Watts Hospital.
Agnes Freeland, daughter of Will Freeland, is in Watts Hospital. She has been critically ill but is getting steadily stronger.
Rev. Charles E. Maddry preached the sermon at the McDuffie Memorial church last Sunday morning.
Miss Carrie Moses of Raleigh spent Sunday and Monday in Chapel Hill.
Clarence Pickard motored to western North Carolina a few days ago to bring Mrs. Pickard home. Walter D. Toy went along with him to Statesville and visited his brother, Dr. Calvert Toy.
W.B. Sorrell spent Friday in Raleigh on business.
Mrs. Howell Peacock (formerly Miss Eleanora Wilson) and her son are on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Thorndyke Saville.
Mrs. O.M. Royster left this week after a visit to the MacNiders.
Mr. and Mrs. Dougald MacMillan are now occupying the Greenlaw home on east Franklin street.
From page 3 of The Chapel Hill Weekly, Friday, Sept. 11, 1925
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073229/1925-09-11/ed-1/seq-3/
No comments:
Post a Comment