The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 248, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1962 Page: 4 of 10
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Campbell And
linn, Arnold To Wed
WM
will exbange dou-
brother Ttrf the intended groom
Named as groomsmen are Cecil
I Guidry, Billy Mitchell
tar
D^Amdd at I duties will be pert
In Cedto‘iTyi'|by Ted*; Raitoack and David
Murty Smith. They wiU also light can-
(Naimed as bridesmaids are Miss
.Sharon Scott, cousin of the bride-
Jimmy to-be from Bayside, Miss Card
X: Moajey and Miss Pat Chaddirk.
’ Micha# Casio will be best man
Dick Drew, Troy Tucker and
ddick, groomsm
Guests wijl
ebbie Kimmey
Mi«
^a$? p"m“L ^ f^etti Tompkins <11 be
Church of Aowef girl. •• ^
Church parlor will be scene
Saw ®S£«2?SE
vited through the press to attend Jp^ McIntyret m -
the rites. [Youpg and Mrs. T. G.
The Rev. Don Duran, minister L ftl hpuseparty -
of Cedar Bayou Methodist, will of-1 Mks» jUley
fidate the vows uniting Miss Services for the
Gunn, daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Rjiey and Campbell will be
William E. Gunn. 1408 Bob Smith Uated by Cecil Hafflefinger of La-
Road, and Arnold, sondTMnand Marque. Glen Watson and Doug-
Mrs. William E. Gum, 80S Briar-1 williams will be singers for
wood, the double-ring nuptials.
Eddie Franklin, organist, will The bride will be attended by
accompany Miss Noreen Robins, | her sister, Miss Betty Riley,
soloist. - 'M+& "***" ‘—r
Decor For Bathroom Goes Simple
of honor and Miss Sherry Pittman I 1
and Miss Linda Enderii, brides- water spouts are .heavy wood beams across the
®aids. • Ino longer "in the swim." Cherubs ceding. There is a countertop of
It, groomsmen,
be seated by Larry
Sanders, Kenneth Derrough and
Bill Tadloek, ushfa^ps^ ■■
of JDe
lur- girl.' .
The prospective bride’*
Johnny andQieryl Touchet
reception will be held alto:
■eremofiy on the church patio,
niters of the houseparty in-
clude Mis* Carol Hartrick, Miss
Anita Drew and Miss Marty Riley,
Z By IKAN SPRAIN WILSON
I IlMi
j
,
Parents of
are Mr. and
couple
A. (Bill)
Caban in, and Mrs. W.
ipbell, 221E, Pearce^
L. Campbell of Houston.
'
?Sfr y Jr t ■
fWk'
. ■ | ■> ‘ ■
; -' A*
mm
■\,
Best man will be Rey Arncdd,|are far out; eagles are out; fleur- slate, walnut louvers at the win-
1 de-Ms is wilting as bathroom mo-(flows and walnut molding around
tit So says Marion Wieder, well- the medicine chest to match the
known interior designer who spe- shower enclosure,
cializes in bathrooms. All fixtures, including the light,
"Classical -lines are in. .Greek are "dirty" pewter, she say*,
egg and dart, reed and rib- Men like earthy colors and
I bon are the simple designs that wood tones, Mrs. Wieder says,
people want as they weed out (They don’t usually like pastels or
omateness,’’ she says. bnght rolora Ske orange. They
MEfariwas when nobody paid at jlftfr/Orioiftl and contemporary
tention It bathrooms When they design. ._ ...
rented or bought houses, she says, However, da? pink
but now people often come to her and blue combined with other col-
with architect’* plans before they ors are the most popular bath
make the final decision about room colors, she says,
their home. / I “A bathroom can be stunning
Hui * ' ■ i
■
MRS. PETER JULIUS kUEHN JR.
Doublo Ring Vow* f
“And now there are bath shops I without being white and gold,” In
she the dec
people (
|because they are
designer’s opinion,
display vulgar taste only
"Many
^ everywhere in the country,"
I points out. irhew— - - -
If Mrs. Wieder loves to twwtkl because they are tiytog to outdo
a bathroom rompletetels she did their neighbors rafter than evolve
, .recently tor actor IJsfoert Preston their own simple formula for good
H and his wife at th«r 150-year-old taste.
"farmhouse in rI-N.Y. "You don't need to remove fbc-
“The Presto# love fee charmjtures to do a new, lovely bath-
Miss Linda Kay Fullen And
Peter Julius Kuehn Jr. Wed
Miss Linda Kay Rillen, daugh- satin extended to form
ter of Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Fullen,
became the bride of Peter Julius
Kuehn Jr. in a ceremony June
Kir**®? a.'SLSS- “JSS »
room was Tn#to to look bamlike. |new treatment on a medicine
Weused ajbortag of realwoodcbertdoee. new
Impregnate/ -on vinyl with pegs, complete illumination of a ceiling
off-white father tiles that resem- may be just what a little bath-
MARKINO m fourth birthday Is
afa«tsvst«
for a different look, she suggests,
as an accent for wood-finished for-
C. H. Rogers. Kuehn is the son
at Mr. and Mr*. P. J. Kuehn of
Totnball.
The Rev, Eric Smedlund, min-
us Forrest. Grandfather |* C.
M. Fata el bgMaide. Tommy
fea* to torien, Mrs. Bill} R.
Padgett of Houston aai Mr*. Da-
vid W. Dfflon of Amarillo.
ister of education at Second Bap-
tist Church, performed the dou-
.
K
COSTUME
JEWHSY
CLOSE-OUT
CONTINUES
Vi Price
OUR ENTIRE SELECTION
OF COSTUME JEWELRY IS
BEING DISCONTINUED
AND CLOSED OUT. COME
IN, BROWSE AROUND
AND SAVE
wmaib
1310 Market St.
[mica or a mosaic tile counter.
ble ring ceremony. Mr
provided Wtotial music.
Mrs. Rogers
I Shiny or glass enamel is the most
practical paint finish for bath-
I rooms where _
tore must be resisted and where
surfaces must be cleaned readily
For small cabinets she
strong "out of the paint can”
cantaloup, cerise or royal blue
used in a white bathroom.
, ‘Special paint effects may be
| achieved with rollers,
stippling
I with crumbled newspaper or mar-
! belizing if one just wants a change
I without much of ml expenditure,”
Mn^Wieder adds distinctive ef-
fects in bathrooms by using old
English porcelain jars from wash-
stand sets as waste baskets; pew-
ter, Delft and other decorative
water spouts; furniture miniatures
A seven - branched floor can-
delabra entwined with greenery
placed at each side of the pir-
ure window lighted the room. An
idily- arrangement of white stock, blue
likes delphinium, white mums and
greenery decorated the piano. Two
small candelabras with blue tap-
ers and decorations of stock,
mums, delphinium and greenery
was centerpiece for toe dining ta-
ble laid with a beige lace cloth.
Given in marriage by her fath-
er, ft* bride wore an original
design gown. The bodice of lace
over satin, buttoned at the bade,
styled w '
with a portrait neck-
line and long fitted lace sleeves, bride,
A small crown of seed pearls
held her full length veil of illu-
sion and she carried a bouquet
of white roses and stephanOtis.
Her only . jewelry was a single
strand of pearls.
Miss Sandra Hinson was maid
of honor. She wore a light blue
taffeta sheath dress with light blue
chiffon overskirt, a small white
pillbox hat, white gloves and
shoes. Her corsage was of white
feathered carnations.
Glen Fuller, brother-in-law of the
groan, was best man.
Following the ceremony, a re-
egrtion was hefct on the lawn of
the Rogers home. Houseparty
members were Mrs, Rogers, Miss
Billie Gay Cupps, Miss Sandra
Fullen, and Miss Delene Rogers,
Centerpiece for the bride’s ta-
ble was an arrangement of blue,
pink and white flowers with the
cake at one end and crystal punch
bowl at the other. The three-tier-
ed wedding cake, topped with a
miniature bride and groom, was
trimmed with blue and white
flowers and white and silver bells.
Miss Sandra Fullen. sister of the
• prewaea at me
Small sequins accented the neck-
line. The full floor length skirt of
instead of shelves on walls.
Says Tooth
KENNY RAY HUMPHREY, son
«f Airman pod Mis, Larry Hum-
phrey of BlyftevtDe, Ark., Is
celebrating Ms first birthday
Tnealiy. Grandparent* are Mr.
and Mm Buddy Byte* and Mr.
and Mis. E. P, Humphrey rf
Houston. Great grandparent* are
use* cabinets made to resemble . ^
French hutches with slate tops. IWsu Ir ffUihfliniK
A graduate of Pratt Institute, she MEVOJ IS WnilllJjlWlJ
has been an interior decorator
|for eight year*.
Postmaster Nominees
I VwlHIHwIvI ItVIIIHIWJ
5ESS3W To Senate
BONN, Germany (AP)—A tead-
American dental research
say* it ha* been proved
tooth decay may be con-
tagious ft humans—as well as
animal* • '
SS£»""
Carol ffek*
Dr. Robot J. Fitzgerald, of the
National Institute of Dental Re-
For A Completed Lin* Of
COSMETICS
iH-cnfritav
‘Vour Friendly lUull Dealer"
10S W. TEXAS PH. Ott-UI
WASHINGTON (AP)-President
Kennedy sent these Texas post-
master nominations to the Senate:
John Lambert, Abernathy;
Laura Williams, Glen Flora; Ed-
mond Jackson, Honey Grove;
Lloyd Kuykendall, Hopped; Ruby
Hart, Nash; Dorothy Childress,
Sebum Otyr Jack • Christian,
.Tenaha; Emily Foster, Toyah-
vale. -v 1 ' ,
search in Beftesda, Md., told a
news- conference tooth decay can
be produced by
animal wi h
germs, whereupon
passes from animal to animal
merely by don contact.
room aecay can
' inoculating an
decay-producing
on the disease
At the registry ta-
For their wedding trip to East
(fata* the bride wore I beige
linen suit with white accessories
and a white rose corsage. The
couple is now residing in Hous-
ton.
- I;
Hollywood
^Scenes
By BOB THOMAS
AP Movfe-Televtoion Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - “If you
want to be a top banana, you’ve
jot to start at the bottom of the
pSK-LS £2&££ SL*- »a«
That was the way the song went
the Phil Silvers show “Top
attending an international confer-
ence on oral biology here.
-7%
Rambler Dialers Art Celebrating the Best 9-Month Sales In History-Smashing All Records-And Now.
The Savingest Days of the Year ate Here !
Savingest Days on -
RAMBLER AMERICAN
Compact Economy Xing
American 2-Door D*lux*
Sedan-compact han-
ding. family ate*. And
Rambler Amaricsi
top economy run
In the If. 8. A.
KR MONTH*
Savingest Days on
RAMBLER CLASSIC 6
Set Big Room fornix 6-footers
Ctanto I-Deor Detox*
Sedan-h** Double-
Safety Brake System and
•elf-adfusting brakaa
(both atandard on ad
KtmDiersij.
KR MONTH*
Savingest Days on
iASSAOOR V-8
... Performance-Top Luxury
Ambateader 1-Doer
Cuetem Sedan—luxuri-
Out, roomy, powar-packed
with 250 HP V-8 angina
(270 HP optional at axira KJI MONTH*
~mQr
: 5:^"^
Dnlm Hm S«M Onr 800JW Cm Stnc« Oetsbar
Join th* Wise Car Buyer* • Join the Trade Parade to
SMag Rotter De* on Nnw and UerfCvs
1 new Ramblers and naariy half a million used
: 9 month*. But you haven't men anything yeti
1 beat My to all Rambler history.
1 offering ma non ffcbulocs deals. Try ml
» — " wwyvie - ^ WII MEW I I(SVW I flllUV W
RAMBLER
’j&l
: H down payment, 36-month contract with normal cany-
whitewall tirei, transportation, iaauranoa, ttate and local
Inc
’••e*
2800 Mutet Street
tWWSH S&r*”
for many
banana.
Look at the former second
bananas who are now making it
on their ora — Art Carney, now
’ staffing on Broadway and in tele-
evision spedals; Carl Reiner,
Emmy-winning writer-producer of
the Dick Van Dyke Show; Don
Knotts, double Emmy winner on
the Andy Griffith Show; Howard
mention Tony Randall, once sec-
ond fiddle to "Mr. Peepers."/
All this leads into today’s sub-
ject, Louis Nye. One of the fun-
uteri: men around, he nonetheless
had difficulty shaking his rep as
second banana to Steve Allen, es-
pecially to the guise of the unc-
tions ad man, Gordon Hathaway.
“Let me tell you, it wag rug-
ged,” says Louis. “You’d be sur-
prised how many producers would
say, ‘No, we can’t use him-he’s
too Madison Avenue.”’ \ j,
"The comic, whose agile face can
range from sour to.sweet, had to
convince them he was not a
. . _ ..... a
dub act to which he played
everything from a hipster apply-
ing for a loan at a bank to a rich
young Arab who doesn’t like sand.
"I think I finally got over the
fact that I can stand on my own
two feet," he said. “But there
still
? I ted them Gordon was
—, poor lad."
As Louis Nye, he is doing fine.
He i* playing a magician who
guillotines Joanne’ Woodward to
■A Woman-in July." Hell return
to the night chibs with a date in
Houston next month. He plans (b
make a television pilot for Peter
Lawford’s company. He just fin-
ished a guest spot with Jack Ben-
ny for a fall show.
Once a devout New Yorker,
came west with the Allen troupe
four years ago.
“I have now fallen into the patio
trap," he confessed. “Ah, you
the barbecue.
should see me with 1
m,
marked. ‘T used to waft to work
to New York. With traffic the way
Semi-Annual Style Preview Staged In New York City
/\
s'
1 admired and perhaps be photo-1 Toward the end of the parade iety of silhouettes. These included
crashnf nsn-buss suits 2nd strictly tho enaro nrin/v>«K ct vl<» thp natur-
Prc# Tsshloa TFriter graphed for the society
NFW YORK (AP) -
should, dress herself _ _
were decorating a house, out-of-
town fashiort'.writers were told
! at the doming event of
the New York CouiSra. Group’s
semi-annual, style preview.
They also learned by
lion that if a woman is well
dressed, a well-d:
any other kind of a
last place you’ll find her. ■ „
Most of the fall and winter*
fashions demonstrating the haut
decor'theme were elggant day-
time costumes and opulent ball
gowns-the kind ofostatus symbols
that are a waste unless you take
them beyond the front door to be
A woman Fashion’s exteripr decorators
as if she such as Arpold Scaasi, Adele
Pauline Trigere, Burke
Wariness salts and strictly
social gowns there appeared gome
at-home costumes. A yellow vel-
vet jacket by Adele Simpson, for
instance twinkled witn
like a oiandelier.
Another hostess gown
Derby featured a tufted___________
skirt.tbat fitted nicely into the ih-
this event was the interna- terior decorating theme of he
|NhM|Brari|||KflB evening. There were some se
ous draped chiffons — but really
not what yftu would want to wad)
the dishes in.
To illustrate that a
Sltopifflg. . ^_.™v _________ ______ .. .
Amey and others had clothes on instance,
hand to prove that the same rules
of good taste in decor apply to the
______| tern Inin# figure. iis _.........
They used silk as their fabric,
They proved that the product of
“ cocoon can be maneuvered
^tg) and brushed and com-
bto*4-.WtlKothei organic and in-
orgaic materials in so man;
ways that tt can wm^ut woolly,
the spare princess style, the natur-
al body line, and the suit with
the hip-consdous full skirt.
Eric Lund's space age silhouette
—a couple of double-coned rocket- *
iaud&K
ihaped dresses were applaudi
ically, not only because
' ithtaking, but be-
space is also important in
any
iVlsigaar must pay as much atten-
R SofcNt
to constructitm detail as the
hairy, nubhy, sleek,' slippery, builder, and with as much regard,
shimmery and wispy.for shape as the architect, the
But it just can’t be homey, rpretty models appeared to * var-
Black's Pharmacies
7*1 E. Texn x. Decker at Slerlina
583-1755 582-8107
__
5 year old
iter of
rr z
y
: C* ,.r ' ''v- . " ...
Clem Says....
"The Hotter Hie Weather
The Bigger The Bargains
In Chrysler Air Conditioners''
daughter
Rowe Jr.
the grandd)
Mrs. John I
C. Phillips,
nie Lynn ha
Richard Rc
Carol Row/
John T. HI
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Old at1
Man,Gel
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l housands are j
weak, low in eru
quit blaming it t
ssaassa
ol iron, the "beln
rairbeingoM”.]
PC]
Ostrex—ftwt pepi
•cquainted” jize
THA
-«k]@
CHRYSLER POWER KING
AIR CONDITIONERS
Reduced tos238“ Rethiced to *319“
This is the
new “Sonotp
aid comparec
peanut. It we
ounce, inclut
It’s a wisp
worn entirel;
a tube runn
Women cove
men just tuc
ModtiP12-03• 12,000BTUN• 230Yafts,L2tap. fcMffl'N’IMHITM-fJIVaN'.IIJAapt
Imagine! AH that eooHng power for then*
low, low prices. Enough cooling power in
either unit to do the work of two ordinary
roomair conditioner*. .
Aad Chryaler Powar B»g» Rdtnjb*
matte. Ton set the controls and the units _
do the rest They feature air circulation
louvers to concentrate cool clean, dehu-
midified air in any or all directions. _
Chrysler style, coupled with Chrysler en-
gineering give you that famous Chrysler
gmaty. So telephone today and take ad-
vantage of these low, low price* white
titer test Our supply to limited.
MIL
At Del
Wednesday,
Between I
CJ-
- CHRYSLER
BANK RATE
FINANCIN#
V.v
I ALSO CHOOSE ONE OF THESE OUTSTANDING MODELS
....THERE'S A CHRYSLER FOR EVERY JORI!
MODEL
ITUtATING
Horse Power
Amps
PRICE
—-.{
. SII-0II
7100
1 hp 115v
10**.
$17988
*
PI243
^ 12,000
1 hp.
%i\j
*23988
P20-03
14,000
2 hp.
10.0 Amps
*27988
• '—j ^
.A I
illM
“ P2I-03
16,000
2 hp.
lift Sm,
r- J j* .
P25-03
23,OOfl
‘ m hP.
13 ^
*39988
H3I-I3
28,000
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1
17 Amps
*569®8
H4I-23
32,000
3 hp.
24.0
mm
"We Service
4fc-Sdr
"We Semite
What We Sef
KOVAR’SH
TELEVISION and AIR CONDITIONING CENTER
• NeMi
clothe
Cboic
_
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 248, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1962, newspaper, July 10, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057452/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.