Rio Grande Herald (Rio Grande City, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1973 Page: 4 of 20
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THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1973 THE RIO GRANDE HERALD PA3E 4
Carrillo United In Benavidez
Saint Rose of Lima Catholic
Church in Benavidez, Texas
was the setting Saturday even-
ing, June 1973, for the for-
mal wedding ceremony of Miss
Annabelle Lee Carrillo and Se-
cond Lieutenant David Cava-
zos.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Fernando
G. Carrillo of Benavides. The
bridegroom's parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Zaragosa Cava-
zos of Kingsville,
The Rev. Fernando Igle-
sias officiated at the double-
ring ceremony. Mrs. Rodolfo
Garcia was the organist, and
the Adult Choir and the
Catholic Youth Choir of Bena-
vides provided the special
music.
The altar was adorned with
arrangements of pink and white
spring flowers. Two standing
floor baskets filled with pink
and white gladioli flanked the
altar, and two large candela-
bra holding 12 candles each,
lighted the scenc.
The center aisle, from the
entrance to the altar, was
lined with lighted candles in
amber lamps. The pews were
marked with love birds in
multicolored nests.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, wore a formal
jeweled peau de soie and Alen-
con lace gown. The bodice fea-
tured a sheer yoke of silk or-
gan zine and beaded appliques of
Alencon lace, which shaped the
circlet neckline. The long,
puffed sleeves were appli-
qued with motifs of the lace,
encrusted with crystals and
bridal pearls. The skirt was
accented with jeweled lace ap-
pliques and the hemline was
deeply bordered in lace., The
detachable chapel train was ac-
cented with lace and pearls.
A crown of crystal and seel.
j
h i a.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, RENE--Rene Molina Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Rene Molina of 515
Fairground in Rio Grande City, was honored with a party on his first birthday, June 3.
Friends and relatives enjoyed the party which featured a Raggedy Ann and Andy theme
and a pinata. Rene's maternal grandmother, Mrs. Olga M. Cruz, at'ended the party, and
his paternal grandmother, Mrs. hiisa Molina, provided his cake. Cake, punch, cookies,
sandwiches, and cupcakes were served at the party. Little Rene sent a cake to his grand-
mother, Mrs. Elisa Molina, who is visiting in Michigan and was unable to attend.
pearls held the shoulder-length
veil of English silk illusion.
She carried a cascade bouquet
of pink and white roses encir-
cling a pink orchid.
Miss Becky Canales of Kings-
ville was the maid of honor.
She wore a formal length Em-
pire dress of pink and green
floral organza with long full
sleeves, and high neckline.
Pink satin ribbon accented the
waistline. She wore a pink
lace picture hat and carried
a bouquet of mixed spring flow-
ers.
Mrs. Manuel Canales of
Kingsville, sister of the
bridegroom, was the matron
of honor. Bridesmaids were
Miss Lydia Anna Salinas of
Benavides, Miss San Juanita
Sanchez of Corpus Christi,
and Miss Diane Gonzalez of
Houston.
Sponsors for the couple
were Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
Uresti of Benavides, Mr. and
Mrs. Rene Ramirez and Mr.
and Mrs. Armando Hinojosa
of Kingsville.
The matron of honor, the
bridesmaids and the other bri-
dal attendants were dressed 1-
dentically to the maid of honor.
They all wore pink lace hats
and carried bouquets of mixed
spring flowers.
Lt. Robert Garcia of Kings-
ville served as best man. Ush-
ers were Eddie and Rolando
Carrillo, brothers of the bride,
Conrad Carrillo, cousin of the
bride, and Rene Carrales of
Kingsville, also cousin of the
bride.
For her daughter's wedding
Mrs. Carrillo chose a floor-
length gown of light green silk
chiffon over dark green satin.
The green lace formed the
bodice, high neckline, and long
sleeves. A light green rib-
bon defined the waistline. Her
corsage was a yellow orchid.
The bridegroom's mother
wore a floor length gown of
light blue crepe. Blue lace
covered the bodice, and formed
the high neckline and long
sleeves. Her corsage was a
pink orchid.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held in the
Benavides School Cafeteria.
(See CARRILLO. Page 17)
FKICK WRITES AGAIN
NKW YORK - Fifty
years of behind-the-scenes
baseball are explained in
"(James, Asterisks and People"
by Ford C. fc'rick (Crown),
l-'rick is the farmer baseball
commissioner who came up the
hard way, having been a sports
writer for the defunct New
York Journal in the heyday of
Babe Kuth. Frick also was Na-
tional league president and a
commissioner who once said
"There never will be another
commissioner like Judge Kene-
saw Mountain I^ndis."
For Frick, writing his book
was a labor of love. He refused
an advance against sales and
royalties. The former commis-
sioner dwells at length on how
baseball was 50 years ago and
how it is today. The book is a
must for any baseball buff. If
Ford Frick failed anywhere it's
in Ins 25-nian team. It could
have been a 27-man team and
have included Wille Mays and
Koberto Clemente. Sandy Kou-
fax and Stan Musial are the
only recent vintage players on
the list.
Tne Rio Grande Herald, Rio
Grande City, Published every
Thursday by Starr County Pub-
lishing Company, Incorporated,
James V. Mathls, president,
102 East Second Street. Raul
Trejo, . Mapaglqg Editor and
General Manager. Sedo&IClaqp
null privileges authorised at
the Post Office at Rio Grande
City, Texas, 78582. Subscrip-
tion RateV> In Starr County,
$9.00' per year; Outside Starr
County, $3.50 per year. Mall-
lag Address: P.O. Box 452, Rio
Grtnd^CUy, Texas 78582. Tel.
No. 487-2819.
rrr.,,1 Tfc«msr. wrwr; < '■ i .7=.TJrwarr „
_ In this climate it pays to buy
Gas Air Conditioning.
It's The Tough One!
In thi<; arpa Pir rnnriifiminn
In this area, air conditioning systems get
precious little relief Keeping you comfortable
is round-the-clock hard work These exlreme
demands wear down an ordinary system
Efficiency drops operating costs increase
and maintenance becomes a problem
Because our climate places such
severe demands on air conditioning
eguipment it makes good sense
to install the toughest air
conditioning available That's
central GAS Air Conditioning
ONLY GAS MAINTAINS ORIGINAL CAPACITY
Throughout its long life your gas system will
operate at its original capacity The efficiency
of ordinary systems declines every year
A GAS SYSTEM MOVES GREATER VOLUMES
OF AIR
Larger ducts whisk more cool air into your home
carry more stale air out
HEAVYWEIGHT AIR CONDITIONING.
Stand a gas system beside an ordinary central
unit and you'll see what we mean It's bigger
stronger more rugged
OPERATES WITH NO COMPRESSOR
Since your gas unit doesn t have a compressor
you'll never nave to worry about replacing this
expensive part
FEWER MOV«NG PARTS
A gas system is a masterpiece of simplicity The
entire unit operates with |ust a few moving parts
None at all in the cooling cycle
OPERATING ECONOMY
Because you re cooling with natural gas
you can expect lower operating costs month
after month
_ Contact your dealer or can us for the name'i of qualitiei I
' dealers cn your area ,vho install tough dependaDie Gas Air Conditioning
RIO PUBLIC SERVICE
RIO GRANDE CITY
rrGas For Good, Clean Living
99
7
J
•1
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Trejo, Raul. Rio Grande Herald (Rio Grande City, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1973, newspaper, June 21, 1973; Rio Grande City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194412/m1/4/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rio Grande City Public Library.