Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, June 6, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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Ion., June 6, 1955
A
p.m., education building.
Lotti? Moon circle, 9:30 a.m.,
Mrs.
T. E. Henley, 1003 Dodson
17
with Mrs. Roy Brazelton.
p.m.,
39
special theme.
has
be
4
view
school auditorium.
p.m.,
P!
Joe
Leonard, Sr., 227
and
tomal
variol
Meyer, voted best-dressed in ern trips.
4
Mrs,
Birthday Party
4
center
-
p.m at Central Fire sta-
tion,
Wednesday
and
■
club
■■M
. d
Whaley drive.
dinner meeting.
and
die
wore full length dresses of
3
Wimpey McCoy of Corhmerce
ROBIN JONES, Song Director—WILLIAM K. CUNNINGHAM, Minister
Grown-up Glamour..
jest man and ushers were
was
. I
1
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a T i
I
0
t
HOTOGRAPHIC CONTEST
t
«
and Babies in Natural Due Qolo!!
5
77.98
I
Without Cost or Obligation to You
Set
*
*
1 .
. . . Impartial judges will
?
• COME IN EARLY IN THE WEEK AND AVOID LAST MINUTE RUSH!
- •
9o
44
-FREE
I
I
FREE BALLOONS FOR ALL CHILDREN
$
A
TRA
WE CHALLENGE YOU
I
I
214 1. California St.
Since 1933
Dial HO5-5591
1
I
♦
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total weight
G nousvuq
A(A /I J
Shower Given for
Lorene Buchner
cons
7:30
tian
Mrs
O 1. Six Months and Under
O 2. Six Months to 1% Years
p.m.,
ton,
; ■ 4
■
3
i.
N. .
A Total of ’50000 in Prizes
Will Be Awarded to These Age Groups
■
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ad
ARE YOU A HABIT BUYER?
Do You Buy the Same Car Year After
Year Without Knowing What
. PONTIAC Offers You? L .
■ -
y--
‘ ad
A
4 A
199”
eereveeer
. • r’rrt’e
I
. - 5
travel. Simple?
But if you do, Meyer admon-
ishes, don’t give him washbasin
laundry items. On the other
hand, good grooming aids can be
surefire hits.
Water pressure in the ocean
is about one ton per square inch
for every mile of depth.
-------------
part men ts; junior,"
Around the World
"Everyone Needs a C
I I
For Jo Ann Street
n:
Jo Ann Street celebrated her
e judge,
omorrow
4th Prize ia Each 1
FRIGIDAIRE CUM
$2.45 Vah
if
, j
i
i daily this
n . and will
ogram dur
Ing church
Cii des of First Baptist
church will meet as follows:
L .
I
MRS. PAUL EDWARD TURNER
Gilbert Studio photo)
Church Rites Unite Doris
ale -
Neighbors. Paul E. Turner
The altar of Grand Avenue Bap- Chantilly lace made over net and
No negatives — no
select winners.
1[ .^1.) „ ,-
ig
ELECTRIC .
•WE SEIMICE EV
painting of a loaf of French
bread, with a wicker bread-basket
frame.
“Today’s hostess entertains in
the kitchen as much as in the
living room,” says Gaba, "so the
kitchen should be pleasing to the
eye as well as the appetite.”
FREE-4—qi
A Bottle of "Tweed Cologne"
-lx .9
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
of the
CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Broadway and N. Taylor. Gainesville, Texas
June 5 Through June 12
Hear Evangelist Johnnie Richter
Each Evening at 7:30, Sunday Morning at 10:45
1 VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
Each Morning 9*11 o'Clock Monday Through Friday
CLASSES FOR ALL AGES
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED!
INIERLOCKIHG .DIAMOND RINGS
- , " 2 hanllasekea
\ \ \ \ 1 ! EK iting interlacking
has king-size paintings of a single
red: onion, a scallion, a mush-
room, an orange cut in two, a
to the size of a washtub and
ing the Sunday
service, 7:30.
tist church was decorated with
candelabra holding white tapers
in front of baskets of white glad-
ioli and banked greenery Satur-
day evening when Miss Doris
LaVerne Neighbors and Paul Ed-
ward Turner of Brownwood re-
peated wedding vows.
Rev. C. M. Thomas read the
double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Garner of
1819 Mill street, and the bride-
groom is the son of Ed Turner
of Birch Tree, Mo., and the late
Mrs. Turner.
- Given in marriage by her step-
father, the bride was lovely in a
formal length gown of white
V,
S,
-reme
Ar 3. •. .
V 1
WE CHALLENGE YOU to take a ride in the all new PONTIAC and let us
833
3352
Ritcherson, cousin of the
25—24-Karat Gold Frames
to be gives away in daily drawings during the first three days of
I this contest, j
"Everyone Has a Chanc to Win"
m
((
oday’s casual way of living
changed all the old ideas
about which rooms are for what.
1«
Ky
; .
Classified ads bring results.
- i; 'F
FOR THE FRIENDLIEST MAL IN GAINESVILLE, SU ...
BROWN PONTIAC CO.
Vacation S
At Whaley Memorial
i Vacation Bible school at Wha-
ley Memorial Methodist church
was continued Monday morning
with 89 students arid 23 workers
after the first two sessions, a
picnic Saturday and the opening
Louis Stephenson, principal of
the school, has announced
courses studie-ny churh
it” primary.
Church;" and
—______ ____ies of Jesus."
nursery department has no
baseball for four successive years
by sportswriters and players, ex-
plains:
"Quickie laundry items aren’t
worth the trouble. I’ve tried the
fast-drying shorts, and the wash
’em yourself shirts. But most
hotels provide one-day laundry
service anyway, which is less
trouble.”
Meyer, who is said to maintain
his sartorial splendor iri spite of
living out of a suitcase on the
road, likes nylon stretch socks
for summer, and uses plastic cov-
ers for his suit shoulders.
His favorite item he recom-
mends for all traveling Dads is
small zippered leather kit that
can hold all the little grooming
aids a man needs on the road. It
is ideal too in the glove compart-
ment of the car for the same
purpose.
Shaving accessories, nail clip-
pers, nail file, talc, shaving lo-
tion, brush and comb are all
items that may be kept in it and
make good gifts. Plastic bottles
and jars that cannot break or
leak are a boon to the traveling
man, too. Ditto the roll-on appli-
cator deodorant. Meyer prefers
the safety razor on the road.
Baseball’s Beau Brummel, who
hails from Peru, Ill., is spurred
on in his packing chores by his
wife and young son, Mike. 3, who
live in Brooklyn, too, during the
ball season. He says:
“After one has managed to or-
ganize proper clothes, well
pressed suits, grooming aids
packed in kits, shoes fn shoe
bags, why put everything in a
small crushable bag? A big one
will hold everything and is just
A maximum of seven edipses,
visible someplace on earth, can
occur in one year—either five of
the sun and two of the moon or
four of the sun and three of the
Mrs. D. B. Davis, 920
vceeeveVe->
■ •etre rrnerriv • •
Sears, cousins of the bride, and
they
• 3. 1V2 Years to 3 Yrs
• 4. 3 Years Through 6 Years
FRIGIDAII
IMPERIAL?
- U
Automatic
Washer ;
All entries photographed without obligation to par*
ents ... All pictures completely finished in color ...
LOW-CALORIE ART . . . Artist
Lester Gaba puts finishing
touch to his icing-size painting
of a bunch of asparagus,
planned for modern kitchen de-
cor.
PLENTY OF HELP . . . Russ Meyer, Dodgers' pitcher, gets
packing assistance from his wife and son Mike.
Gifts for a Traveling Dad
2
in
e f
"35
1mm
Acas
fifth birthday Thursday after-
noon at the merry-go-round in
Fair park given by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Street, 1110
. us groupings of asparagus,
as well as most other garden
variety vegetables. All are giant
size and simply framed.
A center of attraction is a
North Commerce street.
Tuesday
CWF of First Christian
church, quarterly luncheon, 12
noon, Curtwood dining room.
Reservations must be made by
Monday to circle leaders.
Ar in Judson circle. First
John Moses of Port O’Connor and
Roy Charles Brooks.
Miss Mary Sue Kuether, or-
ganist. furnished traditional wed-
ding music and accompanied
Miss Barbara Meador who sang.
“Always,” “Because ” and "The
Lord’s Prayer” for the minister’s
blessing.
A reception followed in the
educational building. A triple-
tiered cake topped with a minia-
ture bride and groom was ar
ranged on the lace-covered table
An arrangement of pink carna-
tions flanked by tapers also dec-
orated the bride’s table. Miss
Janice Mason presided at the ta-
ble service, Mrs. Roy Charles
Brooks served the punch, Mrs.
James Caldwell the cake and
Mrs. Lee Lindsay registered the
guests.
The couple left for a trip to
Missouri. The bride was wear-
ing a navy blue linen suit
trimmed in light blue and white.
They will reside in Fort Worth
where the bride will be employed
by Western Union and the bride-
groom by Armour and Co.
Mrs. Turner is a Gainesville
high graduate and has been em-
ployed by the Western Union
Telegraph company in Odessa
for 2% years. Mr. Turner is a
graduate of Brownwood high
school and East Texas State
Teachers college. Commerce.
Out of town guests for the
ceremony were: Mr. and Mrs.
John Moses, Port O’Connor; Mr.
and Mrs. C. W. Turner, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Turner, Mr. and
Mrs. George Henson, all of Fort
Worth; Mrs. H. D. Hassell, Valley
View; Mrs. J. E. Owens, Mrs.
Lindsay Branch and daughter,
Muenster.
Tt wn and Country Garden
.> luncheon, 12 noon, Mrs.
Now that the kitchen has become
the focal point of modern homes,
paintings can move into the kitch-
en along with the guests.”
The artist started his kitchen
paintings as a hobby a couple of
years ago, when he painted a
slice of watermelon for his own
beach cottage and planned his
kitchen decor around it—water-
melon pink walls, black and white
heked cafe curtains and floor.
“My friends saw it and wanted
me to do watermelon paintings
for them, too,” he says. “I did so
many watermelons that I had
spots before my eyes, so I started
exploring the possibilities of oth-
er garden produce.
"Did you ever look at the deli-
cate colors in a stalk of aspara-
gus) or a ripe tomato cut in two,
or an orange? It’s amazing.”
In the current collections, Gaba
church, 7:30 p.m., with
L. C. Slimp, Training
school road. Election of officers
Monthly session of the dea-
of First Baptist church,
by Mrs. U. B. Woody.
Wesleyan Service Guild mem-
bers will be guests.
mg party wore tiny match-
ing hats.
A
A•
1
A V
A • J* 9
Ll
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on your finger Th
real Diamond vak
EULA WEST
Society Editor, Dial HO 5-5511
Monday
g
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B ■
r 838
PP~
> 9
Guests were Elaine Allbritton,1
Ernest Ball, David Hatcher,
Sharon Laughlin, Harold Levine,
Martha Ann Clack, Mike and
Randy Turbeville, Nancy oer-
wald, Bobby Johnson, R o b Ki e
Sue McCoy, Paul Jack Buck
Kathy Callan, Kathy Barnes,
Linda Lutgens, Robin Morris,
Clark Stegall, Dabney Freeman,
Jamey Holcombe, Alex Blaine,
Katherine Zoda, Stevie Speake,
Kay McGehee,. Leslie Joyce.
Leigh, Laurie and Leslie Wilson,
Chesca Stark, Lynn Watts, Jan
Brown, Ty Watts, 'Mary Ann
Slimp, Edwin Earle Wright,
Janice and Connie Van Hoore-
beke. Jack Lightfoot, Carlos
Leach.
ssociated Press Women’s Editor
Art belongs in the kitchen as
'ell as the parlor, says Lester
by 8 v A 0
1 Finest rust pro-
9 d taction known in a
washer that gets
=- clothes cleaner, uses
“ • i less hot water than
• Z many makes. Live-
■ Water Washing
I and Rinsing gets
• out deep-down dirt.
g= I Rapidry-Spin is
P fastest there is.
I See a demonstra*
W tion right away!
Gainesville Iris club, 7 p.m.,
picnif supper at the home of
606 doran street; Lucile Rea-
gan circle, 3 p.m., with Mrs. J.
T. Morrow, 622 South Morris
street.
Al circles of WSCS of First
Ga inesville Emergency corps,
7:30 r--- F----1 F-----
Baptist church, 9:30 a.m., with
David Johnson, 113 East
11
i
I /
6
h
You do got hove to bo present to win.
euLMeMak
pink and yellow organdy respec-
The small girls in the
A $500 P
For Your Children
Gaba. Missouri - born columnist
I and fashion show producer who
has just staged his first exhibit
of "paintings for Gourmets.”
Giant vegetables and fruits
I form the theme for Gaba’s col-
lection of a score of king-size
paintings, ranging from baseball-
size peas in a pod to a 6-foot
single carrot. Says he:
EASTERN IKES’ dreamy waltz*
length two piece ensemble of
soft combed cotton plisse,
trimmed with tiered piping
< and nylon lace and
embroidered with a soft
8s pastel eyelet exclusive
"\ with EASTERN ISLES.
k \ Your choice of
white, pink or
. blue in sizes
4 to 14.
ses will be hi
8:30 to 11 a.
naxed with a
F3e-e ce- «
. •-ev--pec
Blanche Groves circle, 2:30
with Mrs. A. E. Apple-
203 East Church street;
* gets to his destination?
Meyer’s trips are for two weeks
and he takes four changes -two
dark suits of linen or lightweight
wool and two sports outfits. He
is prepared for most occasions
with that attire. He takes sports
shirts along for the real hot West-
Cummins street.
Ruth class, First Baptist
church, 7:30 p.m., with Mrs.
Richard Frasher, 1216 Lindsay
stree t. 3
By VIVIAN BROWN I as easy to carry as the little one
Ap Newsfeatures Beauty Editor . anyway.” ;
What to give Dad on Father’s ” you’re. planning a.big pres-
dav? " I ent for Dad consider that idea—
. .. u , a good roomy suitcase to keep
.One Dad, Dodgers pitcher Russ his suits from wrinkling before
Meyer, has a suggestion — give he gets to his destination?
the traveling Dad something for Meyer’s trips are for two weeks
Methodist church, 9:30 a.m.
Morning .Coffee and Book Re-
Starting Monday, June 6th Thru Saturday, June 11th
1st Prize in Each Age Group
A $25 SET OF HALLITE ALUMINUM WARE
2nd Prize in Each Age Group
A $12.50 CANNON TOWELSET
3rd Prize in Each Age Group
A $7.50 PENGUIN SERVER
McMahon j
YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER Announces for the first Time
Eugene French’s home, Marys-
ville1 road.
Thursday
Rbekah circle. First Chris-
satin. The fitted bodice had a
Chinese collar sprinkled with se-
quins and long pointed sleeves.
The full gathered skirt flowed
into tiers of net ruffles down the
beck. A lace half hat embroi-
dered with seed pearls held the
fingertip length veil of illusion
and she carried a white orchid
on top of a white Bible.
Mrs. John Moses of Port
O’Connor, who was Miss Valen-
tine Lester until her wedding
Thursday, served as honor ma-
tron. She wore a floor length
light blue organdy dress made
over taffeta similiar to the
bride’s. Her flowers were yellow
daisies.
Little Miss Diane Myers, cous-
street; Victor Koon circle, 3
moon.
— .
to the first 200 mothers entering their babies in this contest.
1st Prize to Blue Ribbon Baby Chosen From AR Groups Is a
100.00 SAVINGS BOND
Porcelain Finished Inside mA Out
GOSPEL MEETING
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Lanius street. Cohostesses,
Mmes. Ferol Flint, Pearl Bry-
ant, A. W. Wells, C. B. Shultz,
J. P McBee and Miss Bernice
Puckett.
Come-Join-Us class of First
Christian church. 7:30 p.m.,
lawr party at the home of Mr.
Entries Will Be Judged on Basis of Personality and Expression
---------------------- ---
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Behjamin Franklin school
P.-T.A. executive meeting. 7
MWP-KE
eH322/MK
855*39
• « • • « • •*eeref
•: ? Hi
"y -
I-,
Miss Lorene Buchner, bride-
elect of James W. Mathis, was .
entertained Wednesday, evening Llf
at a china and crystal shower d
given by Miss Jean Rogers at her
home, 1735 Rice avenue.
The party rooms were deco-
rated with seasonal flowers to
carry out the honoree’s colors of
mint green and lavender. The
chosen colors were repeated in
the refreshment plate of fruit
punch and green angel food cake.
The guests spent the evening
hemming and embroidering their
names on cup towels for the hon-
oree The gifts were beauifully
displayed on the dining table
which held a centerpiece of flow - !
era in the honoree’s selected col-
ors.
prrrrev
F’"’
! 2(*i ■
I j Art Belongs in Kitchen,
Says Fashion Show Producer
By DOROTHY ROE
“ 225 ' ik - 4
201 E. CALIFORNIA
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work out an intelligent businesslike deal for you, then you be t
Remember, drive Pontiac before you decide — it is styled for I
and you! i . - I
in of the bride, was flower girl
and wore pink organdy and Ed-
-1
bride was ringbearer.
The tapers were lighted by
Marline Ritcherson and Elaine
-'
AINESVILLE SINCE 1926
-
■ E
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, June 6, 1955, newspaper, June 6, 1955; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1580304/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.