The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 218, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 19, 1958 Page: 5 of 12
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TOKITO
WN SOCIETY
■THn.inaL.UdMt
Tha banquet room of the Her*
maim Son’* was the scene of a
■upper party Saturday evening
when Mr. and Mrs. Ewald Met*
tine entertained in honor of
their sen Elroyce of Victoria
whs recently completed six
months of training at Fort
Chaffe. Arkansas. He was ob-
serving Ms birthday on that
tf«y. Mutton and veal barbecue
with salads, relishes, cakes,
pies and coffee were served.
About 300 guests attended.
Mr.‘and Mrs. Paul Domann
had a party Sunday in recogni
tkm of Mr. Domaim’s birthday.
Hie tea table was centered with
a mirror plaque wMch reflect*
ed 6 large white cake embossed
w|th pink sugar spun roses. Mrs
V. w. Ortmahn of Smiley, pre-
sMsd at the silver tea and cof-
fee service,
A hospitality of Sunday was
the family dinner party given
by Mr. and Mrs. Marcellus
Gohlke with Joint recognition
for Mr. Gohlke’s birthday and
their grandson Marvin Gohlke,
Jr. At the noon hour a barbecue
dinner was served and during
the afternoon tea hour, cake, tea
and coffee were served.
Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Straube
entertained Tuesday in honor of
their little son Soot Dale, who
had received the sacrament of
Holy Baptism at the Sunday
morning service in the St. Paul
Lutheran Church. Included as
honor guests were Ms sponsors
Marvin Koopmaim, Werner
Dohmann, Misses Loretta Koop-
m*m and Laura Boerm. Chick-
en bwbefue was served from
the dining table centered with
an arrangement of roees, lilies
and asters. Covers were laid
foe 30. Out of town guests were
Mr. end Mrs. Harry Sommer, of
Herdheim, Scot's grandparents.
Ghecyl Is IS
Cheryl Jo Both was 10 years
eM Wednesday. Mrs. Valen-
tins MaCnost, her grandmother,
invited Cheryl’s schoolmates to
come to her home after school
for a . party. The birthday cake
was served with sandwiches and
iced drinks. Plate favors were
14 individual candy bars.
Men Otve Bar be cot
The members of the First
Presbyterian Church of York-
town and their friends came to-
gether Wednesday evening in
the Fellowship center for a bar-
becue. The men of the church
prepared the supper. The menu
included barbecued mutton and
veal, potato -salad, red beans,
pickles, canned peaches, bread,
coffee and iced tea. 205 attend-
ed.
Fifty-Two Club Meets
The Fifty-lWo Club enjoyed
Thursday evening with Cymbe-
line Deborah at her home.
Marigolds, roses, cosmos with
red and brawn leaves gave au-
tumn atmosphere. Tally cards
of the chosen theme seated
Frances Talk, Jo Pieper, Selma
Boeckmaim, El vie Beken, El-
mina von Roeder, Rosalind Mc-
Millan, Viola Smith, Ruth
Chandler, Mary Braunig, Isa-
bel! Barrett, Myrtle Letzerich
and Laura Schroeter.
Family Dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nie-
meier entertained Friday even-
ing with a family dinner party
in recognition of his birthday.
The dining room was most fes-
tive with blossoms of the sea-
son. An elaborate turkey din-
ner and the birthday cake with
coffee was served. Sovers were
l«id for 16.
Evening of Bridge
Friday evening Will and Rob-
bie Menn were at home to the
members of the Evening Con
tract Club. Preceding bridge a
dessert course was served at
the game tables. Hand tinted
cards seated Willis and Joyce
Dsvls, Gordon and Isabel] Bar-
rett, Carol and Olivia Janssen.
liana Is 12
Dana Davis was 12 years old
Saturday and to celebrate the
special day Mrs. Willis Davis,
her mother, gave her a party.
Following the {day period the
children circled the party table
wMch was spread with a birth-
day cloth and centered with the
pink and white birthday cake
encircled by twelve candles.
The cake was served with other
party nic-nacs.
Picture Show Party
Master Robert Gohlke, who
was five years old Saturday,
was assisted by his mother Mrs.
Marvin Gohlke in entertaining
15 of his playmates with a pic-
ture show party in the after-
noon. Following the show the
cMldren were taken to the
home of Dr. and Mrs. Gohlke
where the birthday cake was
served.
Party Honors Shared
On Friday afternoon Mrs. Hol-
lis Baker honored her daughter
Dusti, who was four years old.
The play unit of the park was
the setting for the games and
contests. The party table dis-
played'the Hallowe’en motif with
the Crescent shaped black a\d
orange .birthday cake topped
with candles In pumpkin hold-
ers. When the cake was cut, it
produced a fortune emblem for
each of the 15 children. At each
cover was a Hallow’en noise
maker. Little Tommy Swenson
of Austin who was also four on
this date shared party honors
with Dusti. Out of town guests
were Mrs. Glen Swenson and
sons Tommy and Bill of Austin
and Phil Albrecht of Weesatche.
Personals
Miss Elgin Geffert has re-
turned from San Antonio where
she had visited her sisters Miss-
es Sophia and Margaret Gef-
fert.
Mr. and Mrs. Caesar Gerbert
were in Telfemer Sunday and
spent the day with Mrs. Edgar
Schroeder.
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Braunig
attended the Peanut Festival in
Floresville Saturday. They went
on to San Antonio and visited
over the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Hardy Neal and daughter,
Terry.
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Bednorz,
and her mother Mrs. Albina
Hranicky were in Hallettsville
Sunday and attended the annual
reunion of the Descendants of
the Andrew Gallia families.
Mrs. Hranicky, 89, was the old-
est member of the family to at-
tend. The reunion was in the
Recreation Hall, a community
center in Hallettsville.
Mrs. Robert von Roeder has
returned from San Antonio,
where she had been the past two
weeks with Mrs. E. P. Zincke.
Mr. and Mrs. Amo Schultz
visited during the week in Cor-
pus Christi with their son and
family. On Wednesday they
helped their grandson Uhil Hale
celebrate his birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Eckhardt
of .Kingsville and Mrs. Ella
Lott of Goliad were here during
the week for a visit with Mrs.
W. C. Metz, and Mrs. Roberts of
Kingsville, who is a patient at
the Laster Nursing Home.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Winbum
of Delmita were .here over the
week end for a Wsit with her
parents Mr. and Mrs. Joe Neu-
mayer. They were enroute to
Hamilton, Colorado for a deer
hunt, accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Orths of Falfur-
rias. Little Skipper Winbum
will visit his granoparents while
his parents are in Colorado.
Mrs. Lee Mayer has returned
home from San Antonio where
she visited her daughter Miss
Darlene Mayer.
Mrs. Winston Zirjacks, was
here Wednesday and spent the
day with her mother Mrs. Nic
L. Ladner.
Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Schroeter
and Mrs. Herman Riedel were in
Victoria Sunday and attended a
birthday celebration of their
brother Lelai^i Schroeter, at his
home.
The Rev. and Mrs. Alvin
Bohls, and her mother Mrs. F.
J. Shellbase were in San An-
tonio during the week and at-
tended the Convention of the
American Lutheran Church.
Oscar Jochen, George Meyer
and Lee Alves accompanied by
August Gottschalt of Weesatche,
left Sunday for Greystone, Colo-
(Continue on Page j6)
WHEN IN VICTORIA
DINE WITH MAMMY
MMY’i
DIAL HILLCREST 3-4380
‘The Family Cafeteria”
Tm a Country Cantor
Let Mammy's cater for your party • picnic
social • church event
Miss Buendel
Weds Quietly
YORKTOWN - A quiet cere-
mony at 9:30 a.m., Sunday, Oc-
tober 12, united Miss Helen
Buendel and Mr. Leroy Strakos
at the Lutheran parsonage, the
Rev. A. H. Bohls of St. Paul’s
officiating.
Attendants at the single ring
service were Mr. and Mrs. Dan-
iel Goehring, brother-in-law and
sister of the bride.
She is the daughter of Mrs.
Bennie Kyrish and the late
Herman Buendel. The bride-
groom is the son of Mrs. Lee
Boldt of Rosanky and the late
Rudolph Strakos. Only their im-
mediate families were present.
The bride wore a midnight
blue suit with white trim, a
white hat and black accessories.
Her corsage was feathered car-
nations.
Following a wedding trip to
Mexico, Mr. and Mrs. Strakos
New Yorker Nets Two Million On
Sale Of Seven Art Masterpieces
LONDON, Oct. 18.—fUPIT— A New York insurance man made
nearly two million dollars in 24 minutes Wednesday night at an-art
auction that set all-time records for a single picture’s price and for
total sales.
Seven paintings by French Impressionist masters, put on the
block by Irwin G'',’d«schmidt, fetched a total of $2,186 X00—nearly
half again the 31,708,550 rec-
Chamber Music
Program Set
ord set in the sale of 70 paintings
in New York last year.
2 Million Net
Even after commissions, Gold-
schmidt’s net is expected to be
near the 2-million-dollar mark.
A blue-ribbon audience, includ-
ing such notables as Hollywood
star Burt Lancaster and ex-Prime
Minister Winston Churchill’s wife,
Jammed Sotheby’s auction rooms
tor the pictures were knocked
down to dealers—most of them
from New York.
will be at home in George West
where he Is employed with the
Hawkins Oil Corporation.
Picture Titles
The pictures included:
Cozanne’s “Boy in the Red
Vest,” bought for $616,000 by
New York dealer Georges Keller.
The price of this picture more
than doubled the previous record
of $291,200 for an impressionist
painting.
Van Gogh’s “Public Gardens at
Arles,” for which New York
dealer Samuel Rosenberg paid
$369,600.
Others
Manet’s “Street in Bern,”
knocked down to Keller for $316,-
400.
Cezanne’s “Still Life of Apples,”
sold to New York’s Knoedler Gal-
The San Antonio Chamber Mu-
sic Society opens its sixteenth
season on November 25 with the
'performance of Trio Di Blozano,
Italy, in debut. The trio includes
violin, cello and piano.
! Other scheduled performances
; are the Quartetto Italiano of
j Italy set for February 5, the Pas-
iquier Trio of Paris on March 3
and the Hungarian Quartet, play-
i ing by request, on March 18.
Each program will be at 8:15 p.
i m. in the San Pedro Playhouse
in San Antonio. Admission is by
membership only. Secretary Mrs.
J Orville Titman, 415 West Lyn-
wood, San Antonio can furnish
further information.
THE CtJERO RECORD, Sunday, October If, IMS 5
leries for $252,000.
Manet's “Promenade: Portrait
of Mme. de Gamby in the Belle-
vue Garden,” bought by Keller for
$249,200.
Renoir's “The Thought,” sold
to- E. Speelmann for $201,600.
Chi Omega
Alums Renew
Chatauqua
Miss America, Vincent Price
and Emily Kimbrough are
among the stars coming to
Houston to appear in the Chi
Omega Alumnae’s second an-
nual Chautauqua Series begin-
ning in December.
The series will benefit the Tu-
berculosis Hospital and the
Houston Multiple Schlerosis So-
ciety. Last year, 4.000 which
the Chi Omegas gave the Sch-
lerosis Society from the Chau-
tauqua Series enabled the So-
ciety. Las year, $4,000 which
which had been about to close
for lack of funds. The tubercu-
losis hospital made a glass sun
porch as a play area for afflict-
ed children.
Mrs. Joe Lackey, 5339 Field-
wood Drive, Houston 27, is the
Stylish Men
Look for a new style in men's
jackets for fall — the shirt de-
tailed suede. It has stitched
patch pockets, long sleeves with
buttoned cuffs, and a snug-fit-
ting waistband. It can be worn
alone or over a light sweater as
a windbreaker
on to contact for ticket*. She >9
a sister-in-law of Colonel and
Mrs. S. C. Lackey. Jr., of Ote-
ro. Tickets start at five dol-
lars and include seats to any or
all of the programs, i
Miss America, Mary Ann
Mobley of Mississippi, will sing
and dance on December 4 \>rh
the second K-.’f. r-f 'he vr
being in the hands of Justin
Wilson, folklorist. P., •• I
star alone on January 22 doing
readings and stories. Emily Kim-
brough. co-author of Our Hearts
Were Young and Gay, will ap-
pear on March 12th.
i m 333 M
A l W A Y S FIRST Q U A l I T Y !
Tuesday October 21st Is Cuero
BONUS DAY
Penney’s
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY'.
top tailoring! better fabrics! ’
GREAT PENNEY SAVINGS
Checked “university” or Or-
ion frilled printed granny
type! Your youngster is warm
in lovely pajamas at top sav-
ings! Machine wash.
Sizes 4 to 16
fc'i
If
I
I
1,
4toKv.,vKv/hW
SPECIAL PURCHASE
SHEER NYLONS
sit
8$ .
Our popular bonus day special
J Nylons in 60 Gauge 15 Denier
first quality hose. Sizes 8'»-
.....1 o 11 in gala color. Be sure to
! come in early for these.
PAIR
VlflY- ir -.......’ .. -v---:-:- ^■ ■ .V--..v..,-;..2-
:........
COTTON FLANNEL
NIGHTGOWNS
Timely savings! Printed all
qyer in flowers. Mother Hub-
bard warmers in softest
flannelette. Buy an assortment.
Prepare for a cozy winter!
Sizes 34 to 48.
r ■*' ft
II
j* . i'lslf
11 '
WOOL FLANNEL
$5 FLANNELS
HERE THEY ARE!
CREW NECKS
SAVE MORE ON
BULKY LOOKS
5 -
• ••••:•
lym
mmmm
f, '!> V:
M
lysim
FLANNEL LINED ■ JOT’S SHIRT!
BOXER STYLED
STRIPED DENIM
OH BOY! PLAID
FLANNEL SUEDE!
waist sizes 26 to 42
And there’s more! Soft to the
touch flannels have continuous
waistband, pleated front . . .
attention to detail. Fall's
warmest charcoal, grey,
brown.
small, medium, large,
extra large
Virgin lambs’ wool and virgin
Shetland blend pullovers with
crew neck. Charcoal heather,
light oxford heather, tan hea-
ther, red and light blue.
OUR $5 BLANKETS GIVE
YOU MORE WARM VALUE!
What grand blankets you get
at Penney’s for this low price!
Plaids, attractive jacquards,
solid colors. 90% rayon with
10% nylon or 10% Orion.
Nylon bound.
life
sizes 2 to 8
Ruggedly reinforced 9-ounce
denim backed with printed
cotton flannel! Both are San-
forized to keep that generous
Penney fit. No-slip elastic
waist
Sizes 2 to 4
Top make, topmost Penney
savings! Warm, colorful plaid
“sportshirt” like dad's. Even
long sleeves! Machine wash in
lukewarm water.
SPECIAL!
Women’s Acetate
TRICOT BRIEFS
f Pair
Repeat of our popular under-
wear special! Acetate tricot
knit briefs in white and assort-
ed colors in sizes small, med-
ium, and Urge. Come early
for these.
Special! Men’s
BOXER SHORTS
Men's sanforized printed
broadcloth boxer shorts
sizes 30 to 40.
2 PAIR $1
Special! Toddlers
NYLON DRESSES
A special selection of pretty
dressy nylons, flocks and dots
for the toddler girl.
I
Reduced! Ladies
BETTER DRESSES
Selected dresses from our own
stock of better dresses
reduced!
5 .i *8
go
SPECIAL!
Fine Quality
MEN’S T-SHIRTS
111
-H.
Men's white cotton knit T-
shirts at a special low price
for bonus day!
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 218, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 19, 1958, newspaper, October 19, 1958; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698172/m1/5/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.