The Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 118, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1966 Page: 3 of 14
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THE CHEROKEEAN OF RUSK, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1966
PAGE THREE
Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Long of Rusk announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Lila Jean, to
Mr. David M. Murry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Murry
of Jacksonville, The wedding will be an event of June 17.
Mis. Helen Case To Take NDEA Course
COLLEGE STATION—Mrs.
Helen S. Case of Rusk will
study English in an NDEA
institute at Texas A & M Uni-
versity this summer.
The Rusk High School tea-
cher is one of 45 partici-
pants in the eight-week sch-
ool instructed by A&M's Eng-
lish Department faculty be
ginning June 6. She reside',
in Rusk.
High school and junior high
teachers will take specially
designed graduate courses in
composition, English lan-
guage and literature in lee-
Tea Given
To Introduce
Mrs: Neill
A tea honoring Mrs. Pat H,
Neill, new resident of Rusk,
was given Saturday afternoon
in the home of Mrs. Lloyd
Pipes, 1207E. Copeland. Hos-
tesses with Mrs. Pipes to
honor the newcomer were
Mrs. Morris Hassell, Mrs.
Jack Martin and Mrs. Elma
Musick, Jr.
Guests were greeted by Mrs.
Pipes and received by the
honoree, and her mother,
Mrs. Jeff Austin, Sr. of Jack-
sonville and Frankston.
The refreshment table was
beautifully appointed in a pink
theme. The cloth was pas-
tel pink net over pink taf-
feta, The table's centerpiece
was an artistic ar angement
of pink blossoms in a silver
and crystal epergne. Rose
pink party punch was serv-
ed by Miss Judy Martin. Pink
tinted coconut balls, straw-
berry shaped candles, ribbon
sandwiches, open faced sand-
wiches, mints and nuts were
also offered.
Others assisting in the
houseparty were Mrs. John-
nie McKay and Mrs. Mar-
shall Dear.
Over 150 called during the
appointed hours of three to
six o'clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Neill are mak-
ing their home on North Pe-
can Street. Mr. Neill has
joined the staff of First St-
ate Bank as Vice President.
Presbyterian
Circles Meet
For Bble Study
The Evening Circle of the
First Presbyterian Church
met with Mrs, Albert Kojack,
2206 E, Johnson last week
with the following present;
Mesdames lldred Fulton,
Lois Henry, Adon Duncan,
M. R. Phllbrick, C. J. Har-
klns, and Allen Hoi ley.
The Chairman, Mrs. Henry,
officiated for a business
meeting, which was opened
with group recitation of The
Lord's Prayer.
Mre. Harkins presented the
Bible Study, "A Growing Ch-
urch", taken from Acts,
During the social hour, re-
freehments were served.
The Afternoon Circle met
at the home of Mre. Frank
Coupland Monday, with Miss
May Gibson presenting the
Bible lesson.
tures, seminars and work-
shops.
"Problems of teaching Eng-
lish plus practice and ap-
plication of theory and tech-
niques will be seminar to-
pics," noted J. S. Jernigan,
English professor and in-
stitute director. "Workshops
will be a full-time activity
during the last two weeks."
Farewell Party
Honors Stanley
Storer Saturday
A group of sophomores at
Rusk High School headed the
arrangements committee for
a party last Saturday night
to honor a departing faculty
member, btanley Storer. All
students of the high cliool
body were invited i. attend
the farewell fete held at the
hoitu of V( ;nd Mr . Coy
Martin.
Outdoor ircorations featur-
ed hurricane lamps and Ja-
panese lanterns hung on el-
ectric lights throughout the
patio-entertaining area.
Planning the party as a sur-
prise for Mr. Storer, the
youthful hosts invited him to
attend a party for themsel-
ves. On arrival, when he saw
the sign on the glass doors,
"Good Luck, Mr. Storer,"
he then knew the party was in
his honor. The students pool-
ed their finances and present-
ed him an elegant gold watch.
It was wrapped in four se-
parate packages, with the out-
er box artistically (?) done
in newspaper scraps and let-
tered "Stan, the Man". The
last and final box containing
the gift was beautifully gift
wrapped, ofcourse.The watch
was engraved on the back,
"R.H.S., '65-'66".
The young people had pre-
pared for serving, sandwich-
es, potato chips, cold drinks,
cookies and dip. Over 100
attended the festivity, enjoy-
ing refreshments, and danc-
ing to a musical combo com-
posed of Chuck Swift, William
Ed Tosh, Jimmy Sartain, and
Clayton Poole.
Storer has taught science
the past year at Rusk High
School. He will be teaching
in September at Woodsboro,
in Refugio County.
Mrs. Louis Long
Entertains Rusk
Sewing Club Wed.
Mrs. Louis Long was hos-
tess to the Rusk Sewing Club
at her home on Hudson Road,
May 18th. Present for the
meeting were Mesdames C.
S. Hinton, Sr., Roy Isgate,
John Long, George Nelson,
Jean Cargill, Christine Man-
ess, Gladys Goodson, J. E.
Murray and B. P. Reed.
In the absence of the pre-
sident Mrs. Warren Baker,
Mrs. Hinton presided for the
business session.
Members showered the hos-
tess with very nice and use-
ful gifts. The next meeting
will lie with Mrs. John Long
on June 1.
After a pleasant afternoon
of visiting and sewing, the
hostess served delicious re-
freshment.
wscs
Mete Have
Meeting Tues.
The WSCS of First Metho-
dist Church met Tuesday
morning at 9;30 in the Ch-
urch Parlor. Mrs. Charles
H. Linney, President, pre-
sided at the business meet-
ing.
The final study of the Bea-
titudes was given by Mrs.
W. W. Finley, Mrs. Hugh
Mitchell and Mrs. Bill Quinn.
Other members attending
were Mmes. W. L. Knapp,
Ed Ratcliff, Elma Musick,
Sr., Bill Shattuck, Esther
Harrison, Roy Isgate, Claude
Chisum, Howard Pratt and
P. B. Musslewhite. Milty
Beall of Tyler was a guest.
J/U'l/UI
- vi.
' i
! 4'tf .
TEA FETES NEW RESIDENT-The home of
Mrs. Lloyd Pipes, right, was the setting
for a social function Saturday afternoon hon-
oring Mrs. Pat H. Neill, new Rusk resi-
dent. Hostesses for the lovely party with
Mrs. Pipes were, from left Mrs. Morris
Hassell, Mrs. Elma Musick, Jr., and Mrs.
Jack Martin. Also pictured here is the mother
of the honoree, Mrs. Jeff Austin, Sr., third
from right. STAFF PHOTO
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Whitehead, E. H. The Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 118, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1966, newspaper, May 26, 1966; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150654/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.