The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 20, 1986 Page: 2 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Paducah Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bicentennial City County Library.
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PAGE 2
MEMBER 1986
obituaries
• • • • 9
Essie Miller
Frank Adams—Publisher
Patty Adams—Editor
LI
Judy Burns—Advertising Art
J.C. Taylor—Photo-Typist
Clarification of
COUNTY
RECORDS
Km
IT
A
TSTI Preview Set at Waco
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as
The following is
NOW IN STOCK
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8
’83 MERCURY GRAND MARQUI
79 LINCOLN MARK V
TAI
’84 CHEVROLET VAN
COKE
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E-pioy |
CoK$J
ri
A l«t
Sum Thangs
it takes tuh be
Hance’s Son
To Be Here
Texas State Technical Institute
(TSTI) in Waco will hold an open
house for all high school students
interested in learning more about
the school on April 4-5, according to
school officials.
“TSTI Sneak Preview ’86” will
be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, April 4 and 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturday, April 5.
At noon, instructors and adminis-
trators will change their hats from
educators to chefs for a Hamburger
Fry to be held on the mall at the
819 8th St. P. O. Drawer E.
Paducah. Texas 79248
Serving Cottle-King Counties for 76 years
Program booths will be set up in
the Student Center, and refresh-
ment booths will help round out the
THE PADUCAH POST PADUCAH, TEXAS
Myrtle Fite
Services for Myrtle Jane Fite, 88,
■ of Childress, the mother of a Cee
H| Vee man, were at 2 p.m. Sunday,
March 16, in Cee Vee Church of
Christ with Richard Evans and Mark
| Williamson officiating.
Mrs. Fite, a resident of Turner
Nursing Center, died March 14.
Burial was in Cee Vee Cemetery.
She was born in Roanoke, and
had lived in Childress for two years.
She was preceded in death by two
sons.
Survivors include five sons, Tracy
Evans of Cee Vee, Clifford Evans of
Grimes, Claif., Wayne Evans of
Oakland, Calif., Morris Evans of
Brannis, Ark., and Bob Richardson
of Tracy, Calif.; two sisters, 16
grandchildren, 17 great-grandchil-
dren, and four great-great-grand-
children.
PRICES EFFECTIVE
MARCH 20-21-22, 1986
6 PACK
CANS
’80 BUICK RIVERIA
LOADED
Student Center. The “cook-out” is
courtesy of the Food Service Tech-
nology, Meat Processing and Mar-
keting and the TSTI Development
Foundatiuon.
’84 DODGE PICKUP
V-8 ROYAL
SE LOADED
’82 FORD PICKUP
3/4 TON
SHURHNE
MACARONI
& CHEESE
DINNERS
~~ ''ZLj
days to make it a festive affair,'
well as an educational one.
For more information, call 1-800-
792-TSTI.
Raymond McClendon
GRAVESIDE RITES.
Graveside Rites for Raymond
McClendon, former Paducah resi-
dent, will be at 2 p.m. March 19, in
the Garden of memories, Paducah.
’84 F150 FORD ’81 RANGER PICKUP
4x4 1/2 TON'
SWB SWB
I
1
TA
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
Order
19'
BORDENS
Ice Cream
Sandwich
$119
A RACK
ALLSUPS
CONVENIENCE STORES
ALLSUP’S
Hot
Chocolate
30*
BORDEN’S
Homo
Milk
99*
r fresh a hot
I \\ Cora
A \ D°A
w2~89*
Services for Essie E. Miller, 84,
of Paducah were at 2 p.m. March
16, in the First Baptist Church with
Rev. Jimmy Griffith, pastor, officia-
ting.
Burial was in the Garden of
Memories Cemetery under the
direction of Mynatt Funeral Home.
She died Saturday after a lengthy
illness.
She was born in Navarro County
and had lived in Cottle County since
1911. She married James D. Miller
Jan. 18, 1920, in Paducah. He died
in 1975.
She was a member of the First
Baptist Church.
Survivors include a son, Leslie D.
Miller of Etiwanda, Calif.; three
daughters. Wilma Anderson of Pad-
ucah, Virginia Mayo of Pampa, and
Hilda Williams of Killeen; five
grandchildren, five great-grandchil-
dren, and two great-great-grand-
children.
9 1
at
lEUH’S WHILE
Charbroiled
Hamburger
$159
0»w 1
*jFORD|
| ’84 FORD 1/2 TON
I 6 CYL.
J.P. FINES
$804 deposited 3-6-86, with $544
to remain in the county for Officers
Salary Fund, the rest to the State.
$744 deposited 3-14-86, $484 to
go into Officers Salary Fund, the
rest to the State.
•A GAL.
CTN.
A Texas Tech University student,
Ron is using his spring break to
campaign for his father. According
to the younger Hance, “It is
important that people who support
Kent Hance and his campaign for
Governor vote in the Republican
Primary this year.”
use on
Monej
Lee Roy Winton
Services for Lee Roy Winton, 76,
of Roswell, New Mexico, are sche-
duled for 9:30 a.m. Wednesday,
March 19, at La Grone Funeral
Chapel in Roswell. Graveside servi-
ces will be at 5 p.m. in Resthaven
Cemetery in Quitaque, Texas.
Mr. Winton, prior to 1958, farm-
ed in the Paducah area for 25
years.
Survivors include his widow. Haz-
el; two sons, Billy of Yukon, Okla.,
Roy Max of Lubbock; one daughter,
Mrs. Joy Bostick, Roswell; two
brothers, and three sisters.
i
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. •'
• •:
•••
7
•:
■■
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■
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COKE-TAB
$219
I -kJ •
!L
RANGER 4x4
SUPER CAB
Fully Loaded
Q ty/O Financing
s* On Most Models of Cars & Trucks
•A
Local Residents per year..........................................$10.51
Sr. Citizen-Local Residents Yearly)............................$6.31
Out of Town............................ $13.67
STUDENT, Nine Months in Texas...............................$9.45
STUDENT, Nine Months Elsewhere in U. S..................$10.51
Published Weekly except the week after Christmas at 819 8th St.
Paducah,Cottle County. Texas 79248.
te
g
, || w,
a Raancher
I
BORDENS
Nutty
Buddies
$119
1 PACK
Edythe Stout
Funeral services for Edythe
Stout, 69, of Bronte, Texas, were
held at 3 p.m. Wednesday, March
12, at the First Baptist Church in
Bronte. Interment was in Fairview
Cemetery at Bronte, under the
direction of Shaffer Funeral Home.
Mrs. Stout died early Tuesday at
West Coke County Hospital in
Robert Lee, Texas, following a
sudden illness.
She was born March 21, 1916 in
Batesville, Arkansas. She moved to
Childress County at an early age,
and was married to W. Neil Stout on
October 11, 1934, in Childress.
They lived in Paducah on two
different occasions while Rev. Stout
was pastor of the Missionary Bap-
tist Church. They had also lived in
Hamlin and Dallas, as well as
several other area communities,
and had resided in Bronte since
1962.
Mrs. Stout was preceded in death
by her son, Roy Stout, who died in
1983, and is survived by her
husband, Neil Stout; one daughter,
Carolyn Sandefur, of Lubbock; a
daughter-in-law, Teresa Stout, of
San Angelo; two grandsons, Brad
and Scott Sandefur, of Lubbock; two
granddaughters, Gail and Debbie
Stout, of San Angelo, and one
sister, Ollie Vaughan, of Borger. _
Budget Cuts
—By Ora Lee Fra:
Texas Agricultural ExtensiK
Service is faced with 59 percJT
federal and 13 percent st
budget cuts, plus the 4 peref
Gramm-Rudman spending cu
said Cottle County extensi
Agent John Ford in calling t
Post’s attention to incorrect f
ures used in last week’s rep
of the recent Commission®
Court Meeting.
Absentee Vote
Begins in Guthri
Absentee voting, which be; 1
March 17 for King County scB
board positions, continues throi
April 1.
Registered voters may vote ft
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the clerk’s of!
at the King County Court Houss
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS
FOR RANCHING
1. A wide-brimmed hat, one pair
of tight pants, and $20 boots from a
discount house.
2. At least two head of livestock,
preferably cattle —one male, one
female.
3. A new air-conditioned pickup
with automatic transmission, power
steering, and trailer hitch.
4. A gun rack for the rear window
of pickup, big enough to hold a
walking stick, cattle prod, and rope.
5. Two dogs to ride in the bed of
the pickup.
6. A $40 horse and a $300
saddle.
7. A gooseneck trailer, small
enough to park in front of a cafe.
8. A little place to keep cows on
land too poor to grow crops.
9. A spool of barbed wire, three
cedar posts and a bale of prairie
hay to haul around in the truck all
day.
10. Credit at the bank.
11. Credit at the feed store.
12. Credit from your father-in-
law.
13. A good neighbor to feed the
dogs and cattle whenever it is
hunting or fishing season.
14. A rubber cushion to sit on for
four hours at the auction ring every
Thursday.
15. A pair of silver spurs to wear
to barbecues and rodeos.
16. A second-hand car for going
out to feed the cows when your
son-in-law borrows the truck.
17. A good pocket knife suitable
for whittling, to pass away the time
at the auction ring.
18. A good wife who will believe
you when you come in at 11 p.m.,
saying, “I’ve been fixing the ol
fence.”
19. A good wife with a good
full-time job at the courthouse.
—Author unknown.
J
Boron
Milk
J
i
The following is a tidbit copped
f from the Quanah Tribune Chief
columnist Jannice Griffin, who cop-
ped it from Bill Ayres, publisher of
the Seagraves paper, who copped it
from someone else, no doubt. Think
you will enjoy it.
wBB Jpg Appreciate Your Business
Paducah Motor Co.
492-3578
COUNTY RECORDS
WARRANTY DEEDS
Presley Canon to Sadie M. Price;
Joanna Jordan et al to Betty L.
Jordan; Betty L. Jordan to Lindy
Del Jordan et ux; Bettie L. Gafford
to Otis Gafford; Lena Mae Ramsey
to Robert George Lawson et ux; and
Dee Green, individually and as
attorney in fact for Maxwell D.
Green, to W. L. Latimer et ux.
Postmaster send Form 3579 to P.O. Drawer E. Entered as second
class matter at the Post Office, Paducah. Texas 79248, under the
Act of March 30,1897.
The Paducah Post is an independent Democratic Newspaper,
publishing the news impartially and supporting what it believes to
be right regardless of party policies.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or standing of any
person or firm appearing in this paper will be gladly and promptly
corrected upon being called to the attention of the management to
the article in question.
Subscription Rates:
per year................
Residents Yearly)
£
I
1
I
; I
=
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I
1919 Easley St. -------„
,.-^g
■
fr,- ■ A
•Albs
r...
St. Patrick’s Day
Our In-Store Specials Specials®
Are Greatly Reduced nn,\;
Just For You! z-"- / suulib
LAST
e . la
Ron Hance, son of Republican
gubernatorial candidate, Kent
Hance, will be in Paducah on
Thursday, March 20 from 2-2:30
p.m.
TOM’S REGULAR,
HOT OR VINEGAR 4 SALT
Potato
Chips
I 99*:,,
THURSDAY. MARCH 20, 198fiS PadU
Flemons, Burns pBM
MC
As district play ended, t
district coaches met to se|( REC
all-district players. Sevei ■■
Dragon players were selected
the 10-man squad, includi: BP
Flemons, Burns, Hutchinso
Curtis Vatighn. James Alexa
der was an honorable mentio
Coach Ryan stated, “T|
shows the quality of the taft 9
that we have had on c,
basketball team this year. ] *■.■
proud of them.” wlw I
5/$-|00
Milk
MBIF F ’ __
HK w®*
SESQUICENTENNIAL BONNETS...
Bessie Reed of Graham has made some 70 bonnets to be used during the
Sesquicentennial celebrations that are planned throughout the state. She is
making the bonnets from a pattern that is approximately 100 years old.
The pattern was given to her by her sister, and belonged to Mrs. A. P.
Hollar who was a settler in Dumont, Texas.
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Adams, Patty. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 20, 1986, newspaper, March 20, 1986; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1255109/m1/2/?q=%22United+States+-+Texas%22: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.