tCOUPLE WEBS MON. MORNINGJ • • i■ I Robert Woodrow Smith, Taney*| town, alumnus of Gettysburg cdUfegfe; [ in the class of 1935 and now operator of the Taneytown airport and engaged in the bakery business there with his father, was married to Marjorie Aiken Matthews, Taneytown publlsner of a trade journal on antiques. The ceremony was performed in Brua chapel on the college campus at 9 a. m. Monday morning by Dr. Henry W. A. Hanson, college president.The couple was unattended but the ceremony was witnessed by a group of friends and relatives. The single ring ceremony was used.The bride was gowned in wedge-wood blue and wore an orcliid corsage. Her accessories were fuchsia,On Air TripAfter a wedding breakfast at the Hotel Gettysburg the couple left the i Gettysburg airport in Smith's air-1 plane for Harrisburg and then on to Denver in the same ship after getting CAA clearance at Harris-' burg. Upon their return they will ! reside at Taneytown.The bridegroom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Webster R. Smith of Woods boro. Md. The bride's mother is Mrs. Irvfng L. Matthews of Richmond, Va.Mr. Smith assisted his father in the Model Steam bakery business at Taneytown after graduating from college here. In addition to that work, he has served as a flight instructor for the Mt. St. Mary's air unit and also at the Waynesboro airport. Now he operates the Taneytown airport in addition to continuing iiis connection with the oakery business.His bride is the owner and publisher of “The Spinning Wheel,” a trade Journal for antique dealers which is published from offices in Taneytown.Mr. and Mrs. C. Paul Cessna were hosts to this group at the wedding breakfast: The newlyweds. Doctor and Mrs. Hanson, Captain and Mrs. George Marquis, Richmond, va., brother-in-law and sister of the bride; Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. George Hamer, of Taneytown. Captain Marquis recently returned from Europe where he was a prisoner of the Germans for more than six months after having been shot down over Austria.