The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1966 Page: 3 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
JRT
FRIDAY, APRIL I, 1966
THE! WEST NEWS — WEST, TEXAS
Society News
Wedding*
Social Event*
Sen* Item*
Call or bring jour new* Item* to the New* Office — Fh. HI 6-M8J. (There 1* no charge made)
Miss Perales,
Tommy Brennan
To Be Married
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Perales
of 706 North Beacon, Dallas,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Mary Theresa to Mr.
Tommy Charles Brennan, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry V. Bren-
nan of West.
Miss Perales and Mr. Bren-
nan will be married Saturday,
May 28, I960 at 7:30 p.m. at St.
IHward’s Catholic Church in
Dallas.
Miss Perales attended St. Ed-
ward's Academy and graduated
Prom Woodrow Wilson High
School in June, 1962. She also
graduated from Weaver Airline
School in Kansas City, Mo., in
October, 1962.
Mr. Brennan is a graduate of
West High School and attended
North Texas State College. He
is now employed with Navco Co.
in Dallas.
Miss McKinney
Named Editor Of
College Paper
Miss Dolezal,
Carl Ender To
Wed In June
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dolezal
of West announce the engage-
riage of their daughter, Betty
Joyce, to Mr. Carl Jerome End-
er, son of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Ender of Chilton.
Miss Dolezal is a senior at
West High School and Mr.
Ender attended Chilton High
School.
The couple will be married on
June 11 at one o’clock in the
Catholic Church of the As-
sumption.
Mary Plsek
Attends FHA
Banquet In Waco
Mary Plsek, senior West High
School student and Mrs. Hen-
rictt.e Harris, homemaking
teacher, attended the Future
Homemakers of America officer
banquet in the Raleigh tiuLel
Ballroom in Waco, Friday,
March 18.
The purpose of the banquet
was to place incoming area of-
ficers into offices and select a
state candidate and a member
cf the state nominating com-
mittee from Area 8.
Gala Douglas, of Mart, was
nominated for a state office.
Jan O’Dell, of Westwood was
appointed to the state nominat-
ing committee.
Each nominee was question-
ed three minutes by the nomi-
nating committee. Then the
girls had to make a speech on
what FHA means to them.
Mary was among nine district
officers who did the nominat-
ing, with Linda Isabell acting
as chairman.
During the three course meal,
i piano music was furnished by
Mary Kay Costello from Ferris.
After the meal a short talent,
program followed.
Miss Crawford,
Gerald McGuire
Plan Wedding
Reverend and Mrs. W. C.
Crawford of 407 W. Pine, West,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter Trudy Angela to Ste-
phen Gerald McGuire, son of
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. McGuire of
513 S. Cedar, Kermit, Texas.
The couple will be married in
the First Methodist Church in
West on May 28, 1966, at 8 p.m.
All friends of the couple are
cordially invited to attend.
There will be a reception in the
Fellowship Hall of the church
Carter Receives
Western Auto
Service Award
A framed certificate recog-
nizing five years of service to
his community has been award-
ed to Douglas W. Carter, owner
of the Western Auto Associate
Store here.
The certificate, engraved with
his name, was forwarded from
Western Auto Supply Compa-
ny’s general office in Kansas
City, Mo., and presented through
the firm’s division offices which
serves this area.
Recognition of community
service by local Western Auto
Associate store owners is given
by the company at five-year in-
tervals. The honor indicates the
deal has completed a specified
period of outstanding merchan-
dising service to his customers
and community.
The Western Auto Associate
store here is one of more than
4,000 home-owned and operated
retail stores and agencies
munediateiy following the cere- throughout the ua> including
Hawaii. .The store
mony.
The bride-to-be is a 1963
graduate of Cisco High School
and attended Cisco Junior Col-
lege on a musical scholarship
and Navarro Junior College on;^"
a scholarship from the Corsl- '
cana Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution.
Mr. McGuire is a 1958 grad-
uate of Kermit High School and
received his Bachelor of Sci-
ence degree in health and edu-
cation from North Texas State
University in 1963. He is pres-
ently teaching social studies
and coaching athletics at West
Junior High School in West.
Alaska and
distributes W pstern Auto’s na-
tionally advertised con'p^ny-
News From Your
County HD Agent
By VIVIAN H. BI.AIR
You Can ‘Pest-Proof’
Your Home
You can “pest-proof” your
home with a combination of
regularly scheduled good house-
keeping practices and the prop-
er use of the right pesticides at
the right time.
With our modem pesticide
products designed for safe
home use, we can now control
a host of annoying insects, ro-
dents and other pests that try
to live with us.
These pests are not only an-
noying to us, but they can be
dangerous if allowed to increase
in numbers. If left unchecked
they could lay waste to the food
on our kitchen shelves, ruin our
clothes that hang in the closet,
attack the building materials
in our homes, and in general
make life miserable for humans
and their animal pets.
Our progress with pesticide
materials has enabled us to
purchase pesticides in many
forms that will supplement our
by Julia Hunter, Home Economics Director
Lone Star Gas Company
Fish and cheese are tradition- stead of meat. For Swiss Cheese
owned brands and other housekeeping practices to “pest
Fr. J. Foitek
Is Promoted
miss ann! mckinney
Miss Anne McKinney, junior
journalism and speech major
from West, was recently chosen
as associate editor of the Bells,
the student newspaper at Mary
Hardin-Baylor College in Bel-
ton. The appointment is for the
spring and fall semesters.
Anne is a member of the
Bluebonnet staff, Fiat Lux jour-
nalism club, Historical Phila
Society, assistant director of
the Easter Pageant, and presi-
dent of Mimer's Theatre. She is
the daughter of Mrs. Louise Mc-
Kinney.
ROSS II. I).
CLUB MEETS
The last meeting of the Ross
Home Demonstration Club was
a very busy one. Mrs. May
Cornwell from Cox’s Millinery
Shop showed the club some hats
that could be worn with the
latest hair styles, which Mr.
Tom Truman commented on as
students from Truman’s Schuol
of Beauty Culture, Mrs. Palsy
Boys, and Miss Wanda Ellis,
modeled both hats and hair
styles.
The thirteen members present
brought casseroles, salads, dips
and desserts to be tasted and
exchanged recipes.
Then those piesent revealed | the next meeting. The membe j
Lhe names of their secret palsiwere glven posters to make f..
and drew new names for anoth- the PTC carnivai to be held
er year. | May 1.
Annette served cake, potato
Frank J. Foitek, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank V. Foitek of
West, has been promoted to
sergeant first class (E7) at Fort
Polk, La. SFC Foitek entered
the Army in June of 1954, re-
ceiving training at Fort Bliss,
Texas, and Fort Chaffee, Ark.
Presently the sergeant is as-
signed as a senior administra-
ive instructor in the Adminis-
tion and Personnel Manage-
ment course. Among the sub-
jects presented to trainees at
this course are Correspondence,
Typing, English, Preparation of
Orders and lie ,rd Manage-
ment.
SFC Foitek is married to the
former Mary Ann r.uzicka of
West. They have three children
and reside at DsRidder, La.
ST. MARGARET MARY
TROOP MEETING HELD
Troop St. Margaret M ry met
at St. Joseph Hall on Wednes- 11-
day, March 23, 106'., Hostess j
was Annette Kolar.
The troop discussed crafts f
Fetter Named To
Waco United Fund
Executive Team
Albin Petter, consumer rela-
tions and power consultant for
Brazos Electric Power Cooper-
ative, Inc., is the first to be
named to the loaned executive
team of the 1967 Greater Waco
United Fund campaign.
Petter, a native of West, has
been with the power co-op for
two years. He is a graduate of
Texas A&M and has served on
the agricultural workers com-
mittee of the Chamber of Com-
merce. Petter, his wife, Joyce,
and three children live at 1820
La Porte and are members of
the St. Louis Parish.
The executives are “loaned”
to the UF, by their employers,
at no expense to the Fund. They
serve the Fund approximately
six weeks at half time.
At the April meeting, the 4-H
Club girls will bring the pro-
gram. Their mothers are urged
to attend the meeting.
Arlene Vrva,
Reporter
ST. BERNADETTE
TROOP MEETING HEED
Troop St. Bernadette met at
the home of Shirley Zahirniak
on Tuesday, March 22. Memers
present were Cynthia Hlavenka,
Debbie Uptmore, Cindy Gerik,
Elizabeth Blahuta, Gail Urb-
anovsky, Elizabeth Karlik,
Kathy Kocian, Theresa Ma-
zanec, Shirley Zahirniak, and
Janice Hanzlicek.
For craft the troop started
on their shrines. Refreshments
served were sandwiches, apple-
upside-down cake and punch.
ELM MOTT II. D.
CLUB MEETS
The Elm Mott Home Demon-
stration Club met in the home
of Mrs. Raymond Ramsey, Fri-
day, March 25.
Mrs. Vivian Blair, Home Dem-
onstration Agent gave a won-
derful program on diet.
Refreshments were served to
eleven members and Mrs. Blair.
Mrs. Maude Szurgot,
Reporter
Viet Nam Pen Pals
‘Education’ For
Third Graders
Writing pen pais in Viet Nam
has become an expensive hobby
for third graders at College
Hills Elementary School at Col-
lege Station.
They are now baking goodies
and mailing them to their new
found friends.
Mrs. Patricia Marek’s third
grade: obtained the list of Viet
Nam Marines from a story in
the /eco News-Tribune which
1 of a group of men who
uld like to get letters from
];e states as morale builders.
To motivate letter writing in
the third grade, Mrs. Marek
had her class draw names from
the list and write to the men.
"So far we have received only
three answers but they have
been the greatest treats you
could possibly imagine,” she
Margaret Adamson, Joanie | sajd. “Not only have they made
tional brands in this trade ah.
company serves sirnil^ f
dealerships in Mexico, .Puerto
Rico, and Guam. The dealer
program, started in 1935, will
account for more than half of
the company’s quarter billion
dollar sales volume this year.
Western Auto Supply Com-
pany was started in 1909 as a
mail order firm in Kansas City
to supply Model T Ford owners
with such assessories as wind-
shields, tops, spare tires, and
tail lights. Total investment of
the founder, George Pepperdine,
a bookkeeper, was $5 for post-
age stamps to mail the sales cir-
culars which he had obtained
on credit. The company operat-
es nearly 450 of its own stores
and has gradually expanded its
merchandise lines to include
more than 14,000 items in sport-
ing goods, bicycles and wheel
toys, paint, radios and tele-
vision, lawn and garden equip-
ment, appliances, housewares,
toys, and auto parts.
chips, cookies and cold drinks
to the following r embers:
Barton, Carolyn Cepak, Jea-
nette Hutyra, Jean Marie Kar-
lik, Kathleen Kaska, Marie
Klimitchek, Altia Kopecky,
Sharon Kudelka, Barbara Lau-
bert, Judy Snokhous and Coun-
selor Mrs. Aibin Karlik.
H. D. Wendorf
To Address
Law Clinic
H. D. Wendorf, associate pro-
fessor in the Baylor University
School of Law, will speak Fri-
day to the clinic committee of
the Dallas Bar Association.
Tlie committee investigates
special areas of law. Wendorf’s
topic at the Dallas luncheon
meeting will be “Discovery Un-
der Rules 18 and 737,” a dis-
cussion of discovery procedures
before and after the trial of a
law suit.
Mr. Wendorf Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. R, Wendorf of West.
He is a retired U. S. Army Col-
onel.
real people of our servicemen
but they have taught patriotism
in a way I never dreamed pos-
sible.
“This is proving to be an ex-
pensive hobby since we are bak-
ing and mailing things. You’d
be surprised at how much we
have learned about our postal
system, math in measuring, and
brotherhood."
The class also is preparing a
bulletin board to pinpoint the
hometowns of the servicemen
and their location in Viet Nam.
Their Viet Nam map is one
published in December in the
Waco Tribune-Herald.
Mrs. Marek is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Novotny
of Abbott.
Chas D. Slovak
Completes Army
Clerical Course
Fort Hood — Pvt. Charles D.
Slovak, son of Mrs. Tinnie V.
Slovak, Rt. 2, Abbott, Texas.,
completed a clerical course at
the Noncommissioned Officer
Academy at Fort Hood, March
18.
During the course, Slovak was
trained in Army correspondence,
preparation of reports and oth-
er clerical skills.
The 20-year-old soldier en-
tered the Army in October 1965
and completed basic combat
training at Fort Hood.
He is a 1964 graduate of Ab-
bott High School.
Richard Dinner
Letters At TMI
Texas Military Institute’s Ath-
letic Director, Coach George
Watson, presented Cadet Rich-
ard L. Binner, a freshman at
TMI, a basketball letter for iris
participation on the “C” bas-
ketball team.
Cadet Binner is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Karl F. Binner,
of West. Mr. Binner is a’ 1941
graduate of Texas Military Ins-
titute. Cadet Binner entered
TMI at the second semester.
proof” our homes, and in gen-
eral, make life worth living.
Pesticides are designed to
kill pests. But these same ma-
terials can be dangerous to hu-
mans and pets, too, if handled
carelessly. When you made a
pesticide purchase, you also as-
sume the responsibility to use
the pVoduct correctly as di-
rected.
Basic rules for the product’s
use are found on the label,
along with other timely infor-
mation about the pesticide.
Protect Your Child Against
Poisoning
An estimated 500.000 children
will be the victims of accidental
poisoning this year.
Help your children stay alive
by keeping household products,
medicines and pesticides locked
up. Even if you must leave the
room for an instant, remove the
for only an instant, remove the
dangerous container to a safe
spot.
Here's a checklist that will
help you “poison-proof” your
home.
1. Keep
al foods for the Lenten season.
Whether you observe Lent or
not, however, they are the basic
ingredients of dishes that are
tasty additions to any menu.
The following are a few dishes
made of fish or cheese that will
delight your family and friends
throughout Lent and all other
times of the year as well:
Cheese Croquettes
As a meat substitute or as a
meat accompaniment, try
Cheese Croquettes. Beat 4 egg
whites until stiff peaks form.
Fold in '4 cup flour, 2 teaspoons
salt and 4 cups grated Cheddar
cheese. Shape into croquettes
— logs or balls. Fry in deep, hot
fat (375° F. on deep fat ther-
mometer) until golden brown.
Drain on absorbent paper and
serve at once. This make ap-
proximately 8 servings.
Red Snapper Floridian
Elegant enough for company
dinner, easy enough for family
supper, is Red Snapper Flori-
dian. Cut 2 pounds fresh or
thawed, frozen red snapper fil-
lets into serving pieces. Place,
skin side down, in single layer
in greased 12 x 8 x 2 inch bak-
ing dish. Combine 3 tablespoons
melted fat or oil, 2 tablespoons
orange juice, 2 tablespoons
grated orange rind, 1 teaspoon
salt, dash of pepper and a dash
of nutmeg, Pour orange mixture
over snapper. Bake in moderate
oven (350° F.) 25 to 30 minutes
or until fish flakes easily when
tested with fork. Makes 6 serv-
ings. For party service, bake in
an attractive baking dish. Add a
Pie, sprinkle 1 Vi cups grated
Swiss cheese into an unbaked
9-inch pastry shell. Beat to-
gether 4 well-beaten eggs, 2
cups light cream, 3i teaspoon
salt and a dash each of nut-
meg, pepper and cayenne. Pour
the cream mixture over cheese
in the pastry shell and bake
in moderate over (375° F.) for
40 minutes or until silver knife
inserted in center comes out
clean. To make this pie into
Quiche Lorraine (key-sh la-
rain i, crumble and sprinkle 12
crisply fried slices of bacon in-
to pastry shell before adding
cheese. Makes 6 servings.
Jiffy Shrimp Skillet
A quick and easy fish dish is
Jiffy Shrimp Skillet. Place 1
can (10-ounce) frozen, con-
densed cream of shrimp soup in
large skillet. Pour % cup boiling
water over soup and bring to
boil over low flame. Stir in 2/3
cup packaged precooked rice, 1
package (8 - ounce) frozen
shrimp, >/2 cup diced celery, Vi
cup diced green pepper, \Vi tea-
spoons curry powder, >/2 tea-
spoon salt and a dash of pepper.
Cover and bring to a boil. Con-
tinue cooking 10 minutes, stir-
ring occasionally. Add Vi cup
diced ripe olives and sprinkle
with Vi cup slivered almonds.
Garnish with parsley and serve
at once. Makes 6 servings.
Salmon Mousse
Salmon Mousse can change
its shape, depending on the oc-
casion. This delightful mold
can be made with tuna or crab
instead of salmon for a change
garnish of twisted orange slices , Qf flavor Soften 2 tablespoons
and serve straight from the
oven.
Swiss Cheese Pie
For a change, serve pie in-
What A Hat
Can Accomplish
For Alan...
There’s more to wearing a hat
than just grabbing it off some
household product^, Look and jamming it on your
WACO K.J.Z.T.
AND K.J.T. TO MEET
SUNDAY, APRIL 2
The Waco KJZT and KJT will
meet at the KC Hall in Waco at
2 p.m., Sunday, April 3.
There will be an Easter egg
hunt and buffet supper for
members and guests. Each fam-
ily is to bring a covered dish.
(
Czech Cooking
Makes Austin
Newspaper
The following article appear-
ed in the Austin American-
Statesman in the column “Tex-
as Talk,” by Jack Maguire.
“Traveling Texas — Some of
the best roadside food in Amer-
ica is available in West, the Mc-
Lennan County town that might
be a Czechoslovakian village in-
stead of a Central Texas ham-
let.
“At least three-fourths of its
citizens are of Czech ancestry,
and its restaurants offer ex-
otic Slavic dishes like knedlike,
smoked sausage and a variety of
kolaches.”
The printing press has been
classed as one of the most im-
portant machines ever develop-
ed, as universal education is
difficult or impossible without
it, and free government can-
not survive without an educat-
ed, informed electorate.
medicines, and pesticides out of
reach and out of sight of chil-
dren, preferable in locked cab-
inets or closest.
2. Store medicines separately
from other household products
and keep these items — and
pesticides — in their original
containers. Never store them
in cups or soft drink bottles.
3. Be sure that all products
are properly labeled, and then
read the label each time before
using.
4. Always turn the light on
when giving or taking medicine.
5. Since children tend to imi-
tate adults — avoid taking
medications in their presence.
6. Refer to medicines by their
proper names. They are not
candies.
7. Clean out your medicine
cabinet periodically. Get rid of
old medicines by flushing them
down the drain, rinsing the
container in water, and then
discarding it.
8. Never pour pesticides down
the drain. Dispose of pesticide
products by wrapping the con-
tainer in newspaper and plac-
ing the wrapped package in the
garbage can.
Take Good Care of Your
Steam Iron
When tap water is used in
steam irons, deposits of calcium
and other minerals are almost
certain to form. These deposits
usually lead to sputtering irons,
drops of water splattering on
clothes and disgruntled house-
wives.
To correct the problem, fol-
low these simple directions:
Dissolve one tablespoon of a
non - precipitating packaged
water softener in one cup of
distilled or demineralized water.
Fill the iron with this solution
and let it steam for five to ten
minutes, shaking it constantly
during this time.
Empty this water and fill the
iron with a mixture of two
tablespoons distilled white
vinegar to one cup distilled wa-
ter. Let the iron steam five to
ten minutes, again shaking
constantly. Pour off this water
and rinse the iron with distilled
or demineralized water.
Don’t neglect to shake the
iron while you are steaming it
clean. This is the secret to suc-
cess. If this does not completely
clean the iron, repeat the pro-
cedure.
I would suggest cleaning your
iron every two months to keep
it in proper working order. Use
only distilled or demineralized
water, available at most drug
or grocery stores, in steam irons.
Get this piece of equipment
ready for spring sewing. It’s as
important as the sewing ma-
chine.
i __ i i
head, says Miss Fannie Brown
Eaton, Texas A&M University
Extension clothing specialist.
The right hat style, correctly
worn, will do as much to en-
hance a man’s appearance as
any other item in his wardrobe.
Unfortunately, some men don’t
know how to wear a hat cor-
rectly.
Many men wear their hat too
low in front, forgetting that
they lower it another inch when
they snap the brim. Most hats
should be worn down to the
hump on the back of the head,
and up near the hairline in the
front. Exceptions to this are the
hats without snapped brims,
such as a Homburg, derby or
western styles. These are worn
pulled down in front to com-
pensate for the brim not being
snapped.
Snap brims should be tilted to
one side. The more the tilt, the
sportier the look. A good general
rule, is to let the brim touch the
ear on one side, and clear the
other ear by tne-half to three-
quarters of an inch.
Make sure that you’re wearing
the right style to suit your build.
A tail slender man should wear
a hat with a low tapered crown.
The vertical lines will be broken
by use of a contrasting hatband.
An extremely tall man should
avoid an extremely narrow brim.
If you’re tall and on the heavy
side, you need a hat big enough
to balance face and figure. It
is more important to have a full
crown than a wide brim. Make
sure to snap the brim from ear
to ear.
The slender fellow who is
small-statured adds to his ap-
pearance by always wearing a
hat with a well tapered crown
and a turned-up brim. If a
snap-brim is desired, it should
be fairly flat set in front. While
a tapered crown is a must, it
should not be too low.
If you are short and a little
bit stout, practice moderation
in your choice of hats. A style
with a moderate crown and brim
best, with the brim snapped its
full width.
(2 envelopes) unflavored gela-
tin in Vi cup cold water. Com-
bine in a saucepan, 2 packages
(3-ounce each) cream cheese, 1
can (10'/2-ounce) condensed
cream of mushroom soup, 1 cup
mayonnaise, 1 small grated on-
ion, 1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce, and Vi teaspoon salt.
Cook over very low flame until
blended. Remove from flame
and stir in softened gelatin un-
til dissolved. Add 1 can (1-lb.)
flaked red saimon and 1 cup
chopped celery. Pour into a Wi
quart mold. Chill until firm.
Serve on a bed of salad greens.
Makes 8 servings.
Clifton To Host
Lake Whitney
Beauty Pageant
Lake Whitney — The four-
teenth annual Lake Whitney
Beauty Pageant April 15 and
16 at Clifton probably will be
the biggest.
Twenty-six entries have been
received — and additional ap-
plications are coming in daily.
At the present rate, the old rec-
ord of 50 contestants will be
broken long before the April 5
entry deadline.
The feature Lake Whitney
Pageant, an area elimination
for International Beauty Cong-
ress, has 10 entries, including
the current Junior Miss Lake
Whitney.
Sponsored Lake Whitney en-
tries include: Linda Sue Foster,
18. Cedar Hill (Murt’s Lodge);
Holly Gayle Koppe, 19, Hill Jr.
College, and Waco (Bond Hard-
ware, Hillsboro); Linda Alver-
son, 19, HJC and Itasca (Hills-
boro JayCeesi; Becky Wilson,
17, Cleburne (Cleburne Down-
town Merchants Assn.l; Judi
Lynn Lackey, 19, HJC and
Itasca (Stufflebeme Bros.); Di-
ane Frazier, 18, HJC and La-
Marque (Shell’s Dress Shops);
Barbara Ann Wilson, 17, Kop-
perl (J. M. Martin Real Estate),
and Jan Bayless, 18, Venus
(Greenbier Gallery, Cleburne).
Miss Bayless, now a freshman
beauty at Arlington State, won
the junior crown last year at
Whitney. Miss Lackey was a
Lake Whitney finalist and Miss
Foster was a junior finalist last
year.
Girls interested in participat-
ing and organizations or busi-
nesses wishing to sponsor a con?
testant may obtain entry ap-
plications from the Pageant
co-sponsors, Clifton Junior
Chamber of Commerce and
Lake Whitney Assn. Contestants
appear in conservative swim
suits and evening gowns and
are judged on beauty of face
and figure and charm, poise
and personality. There is no
talent competition.
The baya, a bird native to In-
dia, builds a long, narrow, cyl-
indrical nest, with the opening
at the bottom. To overcome the
darkness inside, it gathers a few
lightning bugs, and fastens
them to the inside walls.
FREE DANCE
SATURDAY, APRIL 2nd
8:30 P.M.
SHADOWLAND
MUSIC BY
Nemec Musical Playmates
FREE MUSIC
Sunday, April 3, at 3 p.m.
BY
Nemec Musical Playmates
WHEARLEY INN
104 N. CONNALLY DRIVE
ELM MOTT, TEXAS
(P)
MRS. BARTON
ENTERTAINS CLUB
Mrs. E. L. Barton entertained
the Taroky Club at her home
Monday night. Mrs. Alfred E.
Gerik was a guest. Mrs. John
Mashek won high score and
Mrs. Eva Walla won second
high. Other members present
were Mrs. H. J. Kozelski, Mrs.
George Kacir, Mrs. Frank Hla-
vaty, Mrs. Joe Vitek, and Mrs.
G. W. Henderson.
Mrs. Barton served chicken
and dressing with giblet gravy,
broccoli, cranberries, hot rolls,
coffee and candy.
Flowersm
at Sastertide I
S
Please Place Your
Orders For
EASTER LILIES
and
PLANTS EARLY!
IN ORDER TO BE SURE TO HAVE THE PLANTS AND
FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS YOU WANT, WE WILL
APPRECIATE YOUR PLACING YOUR ORDERS AS
EARLY AS POSSIBLE!
WEST FLORAL & GIFT SHOP
PHONE HI 6-5391
WEST, TEXAS
li
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Henderson, Doris. The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1966, newspaper, April 1, 1966; West, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth590524/m1/3/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting West Public Library.