Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 108, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 16, 1960 Page: 4 of 10
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BASTROP (TEXAS) ADVERTISER, JUNE 16,
lHtiO
CHARLES LOUIS GOERNER, age twenty, a Junior at the Uni-
versity of Texas, engineering department, left June 6, for Santa
Fe. New Mexico. While there he will be employed by the Southen
Union Ga.- Company, of Dallas, under the Engineers Educational
Program. At the end of the summer he will return to the Univer
sitv as a Senior to complete his Engineering studies.
Charle. Louis is the son of .Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Goerner of Austin,
the trrandson of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Schanha!.- of Cedar Creek. a
nephew of Mi and Mr,. Charles H. Wolf of Hay City, Texas, and
a great nephew of Mrs. Woody Townsend and the late W. IV
Townsend of Bastrop.
SIT"
Society
"*TJ51?r3
Baker-Brvant
Miss Judy Elizabeth Bryant,
daughter of Mr. and Mr.-. Her-
man Bryant, became the bride
of Airman 2-C William Lee Ba-
ker. son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam Baker of Mt. Plea.-ant, in
a double rinj; ceremony at the
First Baptist Church Sunday af
ternoon.
Given in marriag< by her un-
cle, Charles R. Hanna, the bride
was lovely in a street length
white dress of dacron and cot-
ton, with fitted bodice and tuck
ed yolk inset with lace, tiny
sleeves and a full skirt.
Her shoulder length illusion
veil wa attached to a white sa
tin bandeau. She carried a white
Bible with white carnations.
Miss Carol Ann Hanna, cou-
sin of the bride, was maid of
honor. She wore a pink dacron
dress with matching pink flow-
ered bandeau arid carried bou-
quet of pink carnations.
Airman 2-C Dallas Belleniy of
Berystrom Air Force Base wa
best man.
R" v. Robert Elliott, pastor of
the First Bapti t Church, heard
the -acred vows before an altar
banked with white gladioli and
Shasta daisies, against a back-
ground of greenery.
Miss V, y Bigps wa, soloist
and Miss ( arol Sue Fournier va
organist.
After a wedding trip to Da I la.-
and Mt. Pleasant, the bridegroom
will report for duty at Goose
Ba>, Labrador, and the bride
will complete her studie in Ba
trop High School.
Church of Christ
SUNDAY SERVICES:
11:00 a. m., Preaching Service#
10:00 a. m., Bible Claaaaa.
11:45 a. m., Communion.
7:80 p. m., Preaching Service*
Boys Baseball
Schedule
They have the following
>vhedu!e: Game Time is 7:'<0 p.
m.
JI NK Hi: Giddmg.- at Elgin
Jl'NE 17: Sniithville at Bas-
rop
Jl'NF 20: Bastrop at Gitldings
JUNE 21: Elgin at Smithville
JUNE -'4: Guidings at Smith
villi-
JUNE 24: Elgin a! Bastrop
VOl NGER BOYS
HAVE FOUR TEAMS
There are two teams of boys
age.- !s to 10 (Minor-) the Pir
ates and the Cards. Murray Cal-
lahan is coach for the Pirates
and Rusty Reynolds will coach
the Cards.
The two 10 t.> 12 age teams
will be coached by Jim Trigg
for the Indians and Sugar San
ders for the Cubs. The first
game will start at p. in.
Bastrop and Sniithville
Their schedule is as follows:
JUNE Hi:
Bastrop Cards at Smithville
Beds (Minor')
Bastiop Cub. at Smithville V.
F. W.
Sniithville Blues at Bastrop
Piratt ( Minori
Smithville American Legioi at
Bastrop Indians
JUNE 20:
Bastrop Cards at Smthtville
Biui - (Minor)
Bastrop Cubs at Smithville
American Ix'Rion
Smithville Reds at Bastrop
Pirate- i Minor)
Smithville V . E W. at Ha-trop
Indians
JUNE 23:
Ba.-trop Pirate at Bastrop
Cards (Minor)
Bastrop Indians at Bastrop
Cubs
Smithville Red- at Smithville
Blues (Minor)
Smithville V. F. W. at Smith-
ville American Legion
facts, tads and Fancies
THE CIRCUS
fACT Tii. ir if
' imil 1 ill li f t. . tro
'• ion wcis ihol -I >'•* tinn
Eberhard R rnt, tin itiner
cml Germon ociobtjl who
bequeathed hn rc: i• •
several generations
ypji,./u,v
fAD The small boy tneoVinrj
uruir-r Ihe circus t*nt woi o fod
of yesteryear, with (tie Big Toi
novinrj indoors in the 1950s
FACT -Ci'f US i ' S !it>v<- I r 1 «-
t)feol on TV vatie'y it , s
A refiev la- ■- ite of TV . , «<•■
arc dr-' mode win. popoior few
Roses.
fANCY Circus troupes are among
most superstitious of show peo-
Among other things they be
- e tho! tossing a hat onto a bed
. ootl luck and will never allow
anyone to do if.
. * 1M
\ m
✓W-
—V .
Come to us for
ve4 ot P * ted
yfeddiny
Jnnou^nts
BASTROP ADVERTISER
Grandmother, is
MS BAIRD'5 a
made-up name?
y
y
j 4 '**
MRS BAIRDS
ENRICHED BREAD
V
To begin with, Mrs. Boird learned to bake bread when
she was a little girl. She learned then always to bake
her very best and to mate cleanliness her watchword.
After she married, Mrs Boird bok*
family . and she often gave i •'
Later, in 1908, she started bo« ; '
After that firit bakery come another, and another, and
another, until today Mri Baird'i Bread is baked in Austin,
Abilene, Dallo*, Ft. Worth, Houston, Lubbock, Victoria
and Waco.
And so Mrs Baird's Bread been < ''' 1J
in Texas, because it is baked tl ' *"■
and taught h< r sons to bake it
MRS BAIRDW
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Standifer, Amy S. Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 108, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 16, 1960, newspaper, June 16, 1960; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth237796/m1/4/: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bastrop Public Library.