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Image provided by: Chappaqua Library
North Westchester Times New Castle Tribune, Mount Kisco, N.Y., August 29, 1963 Cornelia Thompson Wed To Rankin Scott Samuel MOUNT KISCO— St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Nantucket, Mass., was the set ting Saturday for the wedding of Miss Cornelia Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gleed Thompson of Chestnut Ridge Road and Nantucket, and Ran kin Scott Samuel, son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Samuel of Suffield, Conn. The 4:30 p.m. ceremony was performed by the Rev. Brad ford Johnson. A reception was held at the Wauwinet House. Matron of honor was Mrs. Paul S. Evans of Duxbury, Mass.. Joseph G. Tompkins of Suf field was best man. Ushers were Roy S. Thompson 2nd, Gleed Thompson Jr. and Fargo Thompson, brothers of the bride; Robert Samuel, the bride groom's brother, Paul S. Evans of Duxbury, Mass., and Edward Sauers of Suffield. The bride attended the Old- fields School in Glencoe, Md., and was graduated from the House in the Pines School, Norton, Mass., and Garlands Junior College. She has been employee by the County Trust Co. Presently employed by Ogil- MKS. RAN KLIN S. SAMUEL vy, Benson and Mather adver tising agency in New York, the bridegroom was graduated from Suffield Academy. He studied also at the University of Okla homa and the Rhode Island School of Design. The Samuels will reside in Bronxville. Trip Winners Embark For Great Britain MOUNT KISCO— Mr. and Mrs. Marlin R. Wolf of 2 Kittle House Road. Law rence Farms, sailed on the Queen Elizabeth on Aug. 28, for a holiday in Great Britain. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf, who have traveled extensively abroad, were last in England in 1956. They have taken an apartment in Sloane Square, London and will spend five weeks touring historical spots in London and England, returning on the Queen Mary on Oct. 2. Their trip was awarded as the main prize at the annual spring benefit, a dockside din ner-dance held aboard the RMS Caronia, April 29, to raise funds for the support of bereft boys and girls at The Graham Home for children, Hastings-on-Hud son. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf's daugh ter, Miss Carol Wolf, long in terested in Graham, is a mem ber of the Graham Auxiliary. 'Caribbean Cruise' Is Title Of Chappaqua Flower Show of a \handful of emeralds toss ed into the sea by a careless pirate;\ Martinique with its touch of France - bicycles, wool en berets, and sidewalk cafes. These islands wil be represent ed by members of the club, Jamaica, a tropical paradise with its exotic flora, mahagony and rosewood will be an invita tion class. Haitii, known for its French - Creole, voodoo, and black- magic will be interpreted in men's shadow boxes. Exuma Islands which seem \like a string of pearls lying on blue velvet\ will be open to residents of northern Westchester. Anoth- island on the tour wil be CHAPPAQUA— \A Caribbean Cruise\ will be the theme of the Chappaqua Garden Club's fall flower show- to be held Sept. 24 and 25 at the First Congregational Church. The club will attempt to bring a bit of the exotic, gay, and colorful atmosphere of these sea-washed islands to Chappa qua, according to a club spokes man. Islands to be \visited\ on the \cruise\ will be Cat Cay with its feeling of gracious living and pink and white cottages; Puerto Rico with its tropical flowers, exotic fruits, and gay Spanish fiestas; St. Thomas, \the Hong Kong of the West:\ Antiqua with its coral heads, sand shoals, and shell beaches; Tobago, known for its volcanoes Birds of Paradise, colorful snakes, and green lizards; The British Vrigins. reminding one 5 General Insurance E. Main St. MT. KISCO MO 6-7700 er Nassau \and its famous straw market.\ This class will be open to the community, not club members. The junior classes will inter pret Grand Turk Island, noted for its sponging grounds; Gren ada, the Spice Island; Domini can Republic, world famous for its horse races; Guadelope, not ed for its shops of exotic per fumes; and Trinidad, home of the Calypso. Since 1941, the Treasury has sponsored two partial payment plans for purchasing U.S. Sav ings Bonds: through the Payroll Savings Plan \where you work\ and through the purchase of Savings Stamps at schools and post offices. MURRAY'S headquarters for scftool supplies STOP HERE FIRST — YOU'LL FIND EVERYTHING YOU NEED! GHAPPAQUA LOOSE LEAF BINDERS (2 or 3 ring) J 1.19 BRIEF CASES from $]98 fo $598 ALL SIZES \LEE\ BOYS' PANTS Sizes 6-12 $398 (All Colors] GIRLS & BOYS SNEAKERS 52 .98 BOBBY DARIN LP. RECORD $2.69 Value BOTH FOR INK CARTRIDGE FOUNTAIN PEN MURRAY'S STORE 11 KING STREET CHAPPAQUA, N.Y. CE 8-3242 $100 PRINTED PATTERN Top off separates with these \personality plus\ jackets Smart coverups for autumn days ahead. Use crisp checks bright cottons, rayon. Printed Pattern 4654: Misses Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 jacket with hood 2% yards 35 inch; without 2 yds. Send thirty-five cents in coins for each pattern • add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling Send to Anne Adams, Box 121 Old Chelsea Station. Pattern Dept. New York 11, N.Y. Prin plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number Pattern Free- Mail coupon in side new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, ready now! Over 300 design ideas, all sizes. Send five cents for Catalog. LEGION TO MEET KATONAH— The first regular monthly meeting of the fall season for the Katonah Legion will be held in the Legion clubhouse on Sept 3. The commander has said tha he plans to start the meetings promptly at 8 p.m. in order tha the meetings will be over by 9 p.m. At this meeting the post' candidates to Boys State, Peter Peardsley and Robert Billingsley will be on hand to tell of their experiences while there. All children buying their firs U. S. Savings Stamp this fall will receive a \Junior Astro naut\ Certificate, the Treasury announces. Stamps are on sale at post offices and at many schools. Abels College Shop Offers Complete Campus Wardrobe By JEANNE LaBLONDE MOUNT KISCO— College girls need search no farther than Abels Department Store for a complete back-tq- school wardrobe and the an swers to their questions on campus fashions. In the attractively decorated downstairs college shop, the store's four college board mem bers, dressed in wool tweed jumpers, long - sleeved white blouses, knee-sox and loafers, will be on hand until Sept. 7 to help girls with their fall ward robe selections. A list has also been prepared to guide coeds in buying clothes for schools in dif ferent sections of the country. Life on the college board is anything but dull. One day the girls—Linda Miller, Susan Bode, Bonnie Jenkins and Judy Car penter—went to a radio station to make tapes about the college shop for broadcasting. Mrs. Abel recently took two of them to New York to see buying of fices. Linda, 20, lives at 12 Roosevelt Drive in Bedford Hills. A gradu ate of Fox Lane School, she is a junior majoring in business at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs. Linda worked at Abels during her Christmas vacation last year. Also a junior at Skidmore is Susan, 20, who as an English major will probably go into teaching. She lives at 8 McClel land Place in Chappaqua and is a graduate of Horace Greeley High School. Nineteen-year-old Bonnie of 14 Church St., Bedford Hills, was graduated from St. Mary's High School in Katonah. She is now a sophomore at Alverno College in Milwaukee, Wis. Judy, 19, who lives in Chap paqua, is a student at the Labor atory Institute of Merchandising in New York City. As a project for school, she.worked in Abels in the spring and wrote a com plete report on the 1 store. The girls noted that the cloth es that seem to be the most pop ular at the store with college buyers this season are jumpers, shifts and wrap-around -skirts. They agreed that there are not too many slim skirts being shown foV casual wear. Sweat ers this fall are not as \baggy\ as they used to be. The trend is toward the A-line, pleats, the shift and the baby-doll jumper. Popular also are the layered look, the little-boy look and just about anything in corduroy. Cranberry, seen everywhere now is the big new color. \Everything is much more tailored this fall, and clothes are not as fussy as they used o be,\ Susan noted. Among her particular favorites are the A- line skirt, tweeds and turtle-neck jersey as part of the layered look. There is not much difference in clothing trends and styles in different sections of the coun try,\ Bonnie said. College girls everywhere depend on sweaters and skirts as a basic part of their wardrobe. Cold winters in the North, East and Mid - West make a warm, comfortable coat essen tial. \The temperature some times drops to 30 degrees below in Milwaukee,\ Bonnie said, \and girls can be seen in caps which cover most of the face.\ For campus wear Bonnie likes tweeds, culottes and the lower ed waistline style. \Sit down and plan out your wardrobe before you start buy ing,\ advised Linda. A women's college such as Skidmore, for ex ample, is a I6t mope casual than large university and a girl's SPORT JACKETS from Sjg95 TOPPERS from $24\ ROBT. BRUCE SWEATERS CHINOS SLACKS WE KNOW WHAT'S RIGHT FOR COLLEGE OR HIGH SCHOOL - AND FOR THE BUSINESSMAN TOO. GEORGE'S 53 KING ST. MEN'S SHOP CEntral 8-3414 CHAPPAQUA WEARING one of this fall's popular new jumpers are three of the college board members at Abels Department Store in Mount Kisco. Left to right are Linda Miller of Bed ford Hills, a junior at Skid more College, Bonnie Jenkins of Bedford Hills, a sophomore at Alverno College in Milwau kee, Wis., and Susan Bode of Chappaqua, a Skidmore jun ior. Also on the college board is Judy Carpenter of Chappa qua who attends the Labora tory Institute of Merchandis ing in New York. The girls wUl be available in the down stairs college shop until Sept. 7 to help college shoppers with their fall wardrobe selections. —Staff Photo by Jeff Harrell. Miss Raub Is Wed To John Hart CHAPPAQUA— The marriage of Miss Antoin ette Raub, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Raub of 420 51st St., New York, formerly of this community, to John Charles Hart took place Saturday in Emanuel Lutheran Church, Pleasantville. The 11 a.m. ceremony was performed by the Rev. John R. Pearson, assisted by the Rev. Marshall Lucas of Batavia. \A Rose of Sharon\ an original piece composed by the bride's father, and \Ich Leibe Dich\ by Grieg were sung by Mrs. Val- eska Van Otterloo of New York and Obed Ely of Pleasantville. There was a church reception followed by a luncheon at Mais- son LaFitte in Briarcliff. Given in marriage by her fa ther, the bride wore a white silk brocade gown fashioned with a peau de soie overblouse and a bell shaped skirt which ended in a train. A peau de soie crown held her silk illusion veil She carried glamellias and min iature ivy. Miss Nancy Speight of Tarry- town who was maid of honor, wore a white chiffon over taf feta dress and a veiled bow headpiece. She carried an arm bouquet of American beauty roses. Dressed similarly were the other attendants, the Misses Penelope Pangborn of Wash ington, D.C., and Karen Forsen- ius of Long Island, and Mrs. Brian E. Bennett of Cambridge, Mass. Gary Butt of Williamsville was best man for the bride groom, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hart of Wil- MKS. JOHN C. HART liamsville. Ushers were Rich ard Fischer of Holland, the bridegroom's brother in law, Peter Gold of North Carolina, and Ronald Miller, also of Wil liamsville. Todd Fischer of Hol land, godson and nephew of the bridegroom, was ring bearer. A graduate of Horace Greeley High School, the bride is a senior at Duke University School of Nursing where she is a member of Kappa Kappa Sorority. Mr. Hart, a Duke alumnus, is a fine arts instructor in the Granville County, N.C., school system. He is a member of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. The couple will live in Dur ham, N.C. after a tour of the Virginia and North Carolina coasts. Americans, primarily school children, are now purchasing U. S. Savings Stamps at the rate of more than 100 million separate pieces per year. The stamps may be purchased by anyone at anytime during the year at post offices. wardrobe should fit into the at mosphere and activities at her school. Linda suggested that a girl en tering her last year of college might select sweaters and skirts that can be worn on campus with knee sox and dressed up with a strand of pearls or a pin and worn with heels for career wear later. A Chesterfield coat and tweeds are especially versatile. There is a wide selection of clothes available to the college shopper this fall. The college board agreed that wise ward robe choices depend on the in dividual, her tastes and her campus. RE-OPENING FALL SCHEDULE of CLASSES Alberta Rexroth Blacker Member of American Society of Teachers of Dancing and D.M. of A. STUDIO OF THE DANCE EARLY ENROLLMENT ADVISABLE BALLET—CHARACTER—GRADED CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS—INTERMEDIATE—ADVANCED Special Classes for Pre-School — Teen Age Beginners Chappaqua Studio Classes in KATONAH 37 KING ST. 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