The Bay City News (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 23, 1956 Page: 7 of 8
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Thursday, August 23, 1956
THE BAY CITY NEWS
Page 7
BENEFIT BARBECUE FOR
RETARDED PUPILS SET
A barbecue will be held in Le I 'ounty Council for Retarded Chil-
Tulle Park September 23 with pro I iren.
ceeda going to the Matagordc | The dinner will he held from
In the July Primary ...
TEXAS' RURAL VOTE .
OVERWHELMINGLY ENDORSED
(CARRIED 206 OUT OF 254 COUNTIES)
(Wilson Inspects Goats on His Williamson County Farm)
■WILL WILSON
FOR
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Ml. ADV.
111:30 o'clock in the morning to 4
o'clock in the afternoon.
Plates will be $1.25 and will in-
elude "barbecue and all the trim-
mings."
The council is a member of the
United Fund but has 'found it
necessary to sponsor this barbe-
cue to meet expenditures not an-
ticipated at an earlier date.
The council sponsors a school
class for retarded children and
stands all the expenses of the
teacher's salary and materials
used in the class.
The retarded children took part
in the summer recreation program
at the expense of the council, and
the group also carried out a test-
ing program pavinsr the expenses
of those children whose parents
were not financially able to bear
their own expenses.
Plans for the future include
speech therapy 'for children in the
special class.
The public is cordially invited
to the barbecue, reported Mrs. Da-
vid Krumholz, an official of the
council.
GUESTS FOR BULLARDS
Visiting the Robert Bullards last
week were Mrs. Verda May Tea-
gue and children of Corpus Christi,
They were on their way home from
visiting relatives in North Caro-
lina and Indiana.
THE CEMETERY IS FULL OF
DRIVERS WHO HAD THE RIGHT
OF WAY!
Important Dales
Concerning Vole
Are Noted Here
Matagorda County Democratif
party officials will have a busy
time the rest of this week getting
ready for the Saturday run-off
election, holding the balloting, and
then getting the returns in order.
Important dates this week and
the early part of next follow:
Friday—On day preceding second
primary or prior thereto, any five
candidates may agree on supervi-
sors.
Saturday — Second primary;
copy of returns shall be delivered
by one of the precinct judges to
the chairman of the county execu-
tive committee immediately after
the hallots have been counted and
proper records made.
Sunday—Votes must be counted
within 24 hours after closing of
polls.
Monday—Presiding judge shall
return to county clerk ballots
within 24 hours after counting
votes.
Tuesday—County executive com-
mittee convenes and canvasses re-
turns.
Wednesday' — County chairman
shall, within 24 hours after votes
have been canvassed, mail to state
chairman complete returns as to
state and district offices; county
chairman shall, within 24 hours
after votes are canvassed, pre-
pare tabulated statement and with-
in 48 hours mail to state or dis-
trict office.
Patronize NEWS advertisers.
gojianza time at Bv*
We've got a good buy
for you -for sure
mmmwm' Bonanza
Trade-in Allowance
BuMG'NW
P3i»»rt(Jer 2-Door Riviera
Time was never riper for you
to start enjoying the thrills
a Buick can bring you.
For today's Buick prices are
low—they may never be so low
again. Right now, in fact,
they're low enough to help fix
Buick more firmly than ever in
the Top Three of America's
best sellers.
And Buick's hot sales pace
means we can give you every
last dollar of your present car's
true worth—which is at its peak
right now.
So why hold back another day
when you can so easily make a
bonanza buy on a '56 Buick
With an all-time high in power
and compression—with a great
new stability and handling —
with sleek new styling--\vith a
ride smooth as melted butter—
And above all, with advanced
new Variable Pitch Dynaflow*
giving you new zip and tingle
even before you switch the
pitch for emergency take-off I
Drop in today for a buy on a
'56 Buick that you'll find hard
to resist!
*New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow
is the only Dynaflou) Buick builds today.
It is standard on Roadmaster, Super and
Century—optional at modest extra cost
on the Special.
With Buick solidly in Number Three tales
spot nationwide, our large sales volume
lets ui deal you an even sweeter
trade-i<i allowance on your present ear—
which ii at its peak worth right todayl
Bonanza Buy
Today's Buick prices start right on the
heels of the smaller cars—but manl
just count the extra blossings Buick brings
you. Extra pow*r and sizzle. Extra size,
room, luxury. Extra-smooth ride.
More structural weight and solidity.
New-as-tomorrow styling, it's the Best
\ Buick Yetl
Bonanza Resale
You can always bank on Buick's resale
value—but your '56 Buick should get you
even more when you trade it, thanks
to today's new Variable Pitch Dynaflow.*
It's the world's most advanced
transmission—only one that gives you
the cruising thrift and full-powfr
acceleration of the modern plane's i
•witch-pitch propellers I
1
€
AINCONDITIONINO
Sit « COOL NBW LOW PRIOI
ll cooli, Alton, dchumldifUi. Got 4-Svaton
Comfort In your n»w Buick with ganuln*
PRIOIDAIRB CONDITIONING
SltMCKKOUASON
ON TV ,
'WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM-
RUGELEY MOTOR CO.
GALEN SAVAGES DIRECT
PLANS FOR RICE QUEEN
Mr. and Mrs. Galen Savage have
been named queen's committee
chairmen of the 1956 Bay City
Lions Club Rice Festival, H. J.
McAllister, publicity chairman, has
announced.
Sub-committee members with the
chairmen listed first follow:
Registration—Mrs. Carter Gor-
don, Mrs. Francis Brady, Mrs. C.
F. Abell, Mrs. George Brown.
Refreshments and hostesses —
Mrs. Gordon Richardson, Mrs.
Frank Montague Jr., Mrs. Ray
Duke, Mrs. Abe Cornelson.
Scrap book—Mrs. 0. B. Stanley.
Transportation <— Mrs. Henry
Hildreth, Mrs. C. E. Carr, Mrs. F.
W. Daehne, Mrs. J. A. Sparks, Mrs.
R. E. Graham.
Queen's dinner—Mrs. Charles
Haring Jr., Mrs. Dick Bossley.
Home assignments—Mrs. Homer
Evatt, Mrs. George Copeland.
Tea committee—Mrs. Glen White.
Invitations—Mrs. Harry Mosley,
Mrs. Ralph Bussell, Mrs. L. M.
Matchett, Mrs. W. C. Tillman, Mrs
W. R. Carradine, Mrs. J. J. Boley,
Mrs. Louis Saunders.
Refreshments Planned
Refreshments and decorations—
Mrs. D. F. Wiginton, Mrs. Thelma
Harrington, Mrs. Hiram Brandon,
Mrs. W. T. Cox, Mrs. Warren Cris-
well, Mrs. Bill Ingram, Mrs. Earl
Selman.
Receiving line—0. B. Stanley,
Newlyweds Will Live
In Princeton After
Trip Through South
After a wedding trip through
the South to Montreat, N. C., Mr.
and Mrs. Clements E. Lamberth
will live in Princeton, N. J., where
the bridegroom attends Princeton
Theological Seminary.
Mr. and Mrs. Lamberth were
married Saturday night in the Bel-
laire Presbyterian Church with the
Rev. William A. Baine officiating.
Mrs. Lamberth is the former
Miss Bonnie Jean Pennycuick, Bay
n:i„ tt:~U O _ T. _ _ I J j. _ ___ j
\jioy xiigii ocuuui gluuuute cilia
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M.
Pennycuick of Corpus Christi,
formerly of Bay City.
The bride's father was scout for
the Gulf Oil Corporation in this
area for several years. He now
heads the Corpus Christi office 'for
Gulf.
Mr. Pennycuick gave his daugh-
ter in marriage, and Miss Kay
Pennycuick was her sister's maid
of honor.
A reception was held at the
church, and the houseparty includ.
ed Mrs. Wayne Slone of College
Station and Miss Cora Louise
Morgan of Bay City.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Lamberth are
graduates of Austin College.
Unit Issues 1,400
Cubic Centimeters
Salk Vaccine In '56
Some 1,400 cubic centimeters of
balk polio vaccine have been re-
leased this year by the Matagorda
County Health Unit.
Dr. G'. Nelson Furbeck, director,
pointed out that this is only a por-
tion of the vaccine used in the
county as the serum is on the mar-
ket commercially.
GULF
,02028 AVE. F
BAY CITY
PHONE CI 5-4625
m
AND
GULF BATTERIES
•
USE YOUH GULF CREDIT
CARD FOR BIGGER
SAVINGS TO YOU.
WITH PURCHASE OF $20 OR
MORE, 3 MONTHS TO PAY.
A PURCHASE OF $50 OR MORE,
6 MONTHS TO PAY . . .
(No Interest)
PRUETT'S
GULP STATION
EAST SEVENTH ST.
BAY CITY
Jack Wiginton, Dean Smith, Abe
Cornelson, L. M. Matchett.
House party members—all of-
ficers' wives.
Presentation of queen's court—
Mrs. Harry Garrett, Mrs. Reddock,
Mrs. Vernon Leissner, Mrs. Scott
Richardson.
Gifts—Mrs. E, J. Myers, Mrs.
Warren Hart, Mrs. S. S. Spoone-
more, Mrs. Morris Wyse, Mrs.
Leon Guzick.
Coronation of queen—Mrs. Dean
Smith, Mrs. David Krumholz, Mrs.
Robert Anderson, Mrs. H. J. Mc-
Allister, Mrs. Ed Stanley, Mrs. C.
D. Matthews.
Float Placement—Mrs. Francis
Savage, Mrs. R. C. Gusman.
Breakfast Scheduled
Saturday breakfast — Mrs. Dan
Smothers, Mrs. J. D. Tabb, Mrs.
C. R. Stewart, Mrs. J. H. Cherry,
Mrs. N. D. Thornton, Mrs. L. R.
Gant, Mrs. Odis Bickham, Mrs.
Luther Bunch.
Escorts—Mrs. Bill Thompson,
Mis. Lamar Evans.
Cake walk—Mrs. A. S. Dierlam,
Mrs. Howard l3tie, Mrs. Aaron
Greenberg, Mrs. Eddie Kana, Mrs.
Billy Krenek, Mrs. Frank Watts,
Mrs. Ben Bickham, Mrs. M. W.
Odem, Mrs. M. S. Parker, Mrs. J.
C. Rickets, Mrs. H. N. Robertson,
Mrs. J. J. Sanders, Mrs. John
Thompson.
Mrs. Matthie Dearmond, Mrs.
C. F. Martin, Mrs. Russ Parker,
Mrs. S. W. Shearrer, Mrs. M. L.
Underwood.
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MATAGORDA PHARMACY
2145 AVE. G
PHONE CI5-2451
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PRICE DANIEL
OF LIBERTY COUNTY
FOR
GOVERNO
PRICE DANIEL Stands I
Houso cljanirg of official
* misconduct
p/ A Citizens Law Enforcement
Commission
If States Rights and Local Self
Government
Best schools in the Nation
Higher teacher pay, retire-
ment benefits and old age
pensions
^ Statewide water conserva-
tion and drouth relief
^ Lobby Registration Act
PRICE DANIEL LED IN THE FIRST
PRIMARY BY 165.000 VOTES
Here's how the candidates rated among those
who know them best:
DANIEL OPPONENT
DANIEL'S HOME BOX
781
115
OPCONENT'S HOME I0X
• 911
321
THE PRICE DANIEL RECORD
Crimj-bLshng Attorney General of Te*as 1946-52 led fight to win bac*
TX'xas Tiaelands, U 5 Senator since 1952 authored toughest anti-nar-
colics lav. in history Worla War II veteran married, 4 children farme'
and membor of PEA dedicated public servant nationally knewn for h-t
fairness honesty and integrity
MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT FOR TEXAS ON AUG. 25
STARTING SUNDAY... TEXAS THEATRE - "THE KING AND
2K555
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Stewart, Bob. The Bay City News (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 23, 1956, newspaper, August 23, 1956; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth428354/m1/7/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.