The Bellaire Texan (Bellaire, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 4, 1964 Page: 3 of 40
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Vodnetday, November 4, 1964
memo from
fr
ei^er
(and
By BARBARA ADAIR
Phone MO 5-7096
E BELLAIRE TEXAN
Bear River Spotlighted
In First Audubon Film
P«g« 3
ness, Hunting With The Camera,
1001 Questions Answered About
Birds and Cruicks'hank’s Pocket
Guide To Birds, all highly val-
ued by naturalists and teachers.
Due to an extremely busy and
complicated October, November
has slipped in on us and the
first week is already half over.
Don’t get the impression I am
a calendar watcher—it is not
always the case!
November is a mystical month
to me. There is complete recov-
ery from all organizational ac-
tivities; Thanksgiving is coming
and one holiday I really antici-
pate—mainly I guess because
there isn’t all the' commercial
aspect of Halloween and Christ-
mas.
Want to play duplicate bridge?
On November 4, 18, and Decem-
ber 2, there will be Novice Dup-
licate Bridge Games at the
Meyerland Club for members
and guests. It is free with free
coffee. There will be a 30 minute
discussion of duplicate (how to
play, how to score) beginning
at 7 p.m.
Master Points and ’ trophies
will be awarded the winners of
each Novice game. Pros and
experts’ won’t be allowed. No
reservations are required.
Don’t know if the R. E. Dig-
gins slipped out of town or if I
just missed the news, but just
heard the other evening that
they are now making their home
in Caracas, Venezuela. Seems
they left 5130 D inell about a
month ago.
Gained a new neighbor a cou*
pie of weeks ago. Was wonder-
ing who the family was and
learned when we drove past the
house and my husband re-
marked, “Why there is Bob
Tribble.” Mr. and Mrs. Robert
G. Tribble have moved from
5108 Mimosa in Bellaire to
5235 Ariel. This is the. former
residence of the Pat D. Cross
family.
Friday morning ladies dupli-
cate at the Meyerland Club
ended on October 30 with a tie
for first place between Ann
King and Jo Ann Blackburn
and Jo Ellis and Helen Henson.
Sally Estachy and Connie Wall-
ing came in thircT.
The Meyerland Club Ladies’
Association is having games day
and a luncheon today beginning
at 10 a.m.
Tonight is the meeting of the
Evening Garden Club for No-
vember. They will gather at the
home of Mrs. Louise Ratliff,
5259 Jason. Mrs. J. G. Thomas
will assist the hostess. The pro-
gram is "Free Form Designs”
presented by Mrs. Leroy Walker.
The Meyerland Garden Club
will meet next Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Homer Bass, 4979
Valkeith. Mrs. Francis Bradford
will be co-hostess. This will be a
workshop on tin can roses con-
ducted by Mrs. Bass, club mem-
ber and national flower show
judge.
Purposely drove past the How-
ard Walters residence last week
to view the holiday window
decorations. Caught Millie home
and was happy to see two lovely
pieces of silver that the Walters
roses had won for them in a
recent showing in Corpus Chris-
ti. Millie modestly declined de-
tailed publicity with the assur-
ance that someday she would
give me big news to print. I
think I would have had the
silver in the window instead of
a pumpkin and witch.
Thursday, November 5 is the
meeting date of the Town and
Country Garden Club. They will
gather at 5007 Imogene at the
home of Mrs. Charles Kaplin
with Mrs. George Dodd and Mrs.
Chas. Woodman assisting.
“Holiday Arrangements Using
Flowers ai^d Fruits” will be the
program presented by Mrs. H. D.
Jones, national accredited flower
show judge. Mrs. Charles Mul-
lins will present “Winter Gar-
dening” and Mrs. Robert Elder
will bring the artistic arrange-
ment to be taken to Meyer
Library.
Master Frank Koniges was in-
advertently omitted from the
names of the Meyerland Boys
who are now members of the
All City Boys Chorus. Congratu-
lations to Frank too!
November 11 will be t'he meet-
ing date of the Holly Branch.
They will be guests in the home
of Mrs. J. W. Moore, 5107 Bird-
wood. Mrs. C. A. Wilkins will be
co-hostess. The program will be
adding “Christmas beauty to our
World of Gardening.” Mrs. E. L.
Wehner, accredited speaker, will
present this program.
Les Belles Fleurs will have a
program on “Corsages,” on No-
vember 12 at the home of Mrs.
John W. Lerew, 4959 Valkeith.
Mrs. Robert K. Welch will be
co-hostess. The speaker present-
ing the program will be Mrs.
Gordon Thompson, 2136 Albans
Road.
Jane Long PTO
Open House
Set For Nov. 12
The Jane Long PTO will hold
its annual open house at 7:30
p.m. on Nov. 12.
PTO President Elmer Peper
will greet the parents in the school
auditorium. The orchestra and
band will play.
Refreshments will be served
by the homemaking girls.
The parents will follow the class
schedules of their sons and daugh-
ters adn the teachers will be in
the classrooms to meet them.
Hurricane winds of 132 miles
per hour have been recorded in
Miami, Florida.
Photographer-Naturalist Allan
D Cruickshank will present the
first in the new series of Audu-
bon Wildlife Films here Nov. 5.
The program will be presented
at 8 p.m. at the Houston Home
Builders Assn. Auditorium, 2710
W. Alabama, and is sponsored by
the Outdoor Nature Club and
the National Audubon Society.
Mr. Cruickshank, a member of
the staff of the National Audu-
bon Society, will guide viewers
on a breath-taking trip across
Utah, Wyoming and Idaho along
the Bear River from its source
in the Uinta Moutains to its
mouth at the famous Bear River
Lovett PTO
Open House
Set For Nov. 12
American Education Week will
be observed at Edgar O. Lovett
School with their first P.T.O.
meeting and open house on
November 12, at 7:30 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Sher-
rill, 5123 Indigo, presidents, will
preside.
C. H. Cadenhead, Jr., 5034
Darnell, treasurer, will present
the 1964-65 P.T.O. proposed
budget for approval.
John Glover, 5215 Caversham,
immediate past president, will
explain the Lovett Plan.
Hugh D. Killmer, 5111 Maple,
chairman of communications,
will explain the method used for
emergency communications in
connection with civil defense.
Pauline R. Davis, 3769 Olym-
pia Drive, the principal, will
introduce all the teachers to the
parents.
The business meeting will be
adjourned. Parents are invited
to visit the classrooms and see
displays of their children’s work.
Spanish Classes
Begin This Week
At Southwest Y
Conversational Spanish clas-
ses begin this week at the South-
west YMCA, 4210 Bellaire Blvd.
Classes will be held on Tues-
day nights—at 7 p.m. for be-
ginners and 8:15 p.m. for inter-
mediates.
A morning class for beginners,
will be held at 10:15 a.m. Senora
Christian Anduiza, 1906 Brun,
will again be the instructor, ac-
cording to Jack Brown, the Y
executive secretary.
Classes are geared for those
interested in speaking Spanish
and especially for those who in-
tend to visit the Latin American
countries.
Spanish classes are also being
held at the East End YMCA
every Monday night under the
same instructor.
Further information may be
obtained by calling the South-
west Branch of the YMCA
HEADQUARTERS FOR
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COTTON KNIT CLOTHING
BUY NOW! FOR COOL WEATHER
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY — USE OUR CHARGE
OPEN 9 TO 5:30 —THURSDAY 9 TO 9
Chapman ‘iYOUNG WOULD
Houston's Department Store for Children
5317 BISSOMNET (Old Richmond) MO 7-1424
Migratory Bird Refuge.
Along the way the audience
will meet moose, bear, antelope,
elk and 40 species of birds.
For fifteen successive years,
Mr. Cruickshank’s photographs
have been included in U.S.
Camera Yearbook as among the
best of the year and have appear-
ed in National Geographic Maga-
zine, Natural History, Audubon
Magazine and Life. He is the
author of Birds Around New
York City, Wings In The Wilder-
USED BOOKS
BOUGHT & SOLD
Used, out of print Fiction, Non-
Fiction, History, World Wars, Art,
Poetry, Children's Books, etc.
NEW AND USED TEXANA
COME IN AND BROWSE
KENDRICK BOOK STORE
2429 Rice Blvd. JA 8-3388
Dr. M. L. L«hr
Kidney Trouble?
Houston mother of 3. Left kidney
removed because of renal calculi.
Right kidney involved also and
rapidly becoming worse. Now
grandmother of 10 and in excel-
lent health.
Dr. Elsa Uhr
After our Chiropractic spinal analysis located the causative defective nerves,
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“Are you still wearing those
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M ^
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Sill BELLAIRE ILVD. AT RICE
MO 6-1528
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Norton-Miller, Mary. The Bellaire Texan (Bellaire, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 4, 1964, newspaper, November 4, 1964; Bellaire, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth521431/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bellaire Friends Library & Historical Society.