The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1972 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 14 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE PADUCAH POST
March
Animal Health
Mulkey insurance Agency
CHARLIE C. CURRY.,
General Insurance
Tr
LENTEN SERVICES
PAD
R
Song Leader
CEE VEE
PADUCAH
MARCH 6-6 p.jvi
MARCH 5-7 P.M.
DUMONT
MARCH 6-7-8 -
MARCH 7-6 P,M,'
7 A.M & 7:30 P.M.
much as
DR. GASTON FOOTE
Set
YOURSELF
A
e.
J
COURSE
Gas Drying
Either we’re four times cheaper, or
1
we
2% Cash Discount. Also, due to our
a
suppliers charging us an interest, we will
a
GUTHRIE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
on all accounts
HE’
month.
the
following
First National Bank
Paducah Motor Co. Inc-
for your business and
We thank you
Hall-Scruggs & Company
better
look forward to servicing you to
I
a
Paducah Cash Grocery
Carpenter & Liedtke
advantage in the future.
Jones & Renfro
HE
Diersing 66 Rural Service
Mr. & Mrs. J. R. Jeter & Staff
Burrus Grocery
Town House Motel
Hamrick Thriftway Grocery
JETER FARM STORE
2 PER CENT
DISCOUNT
In appreciation to our Cash Customers:
Beginning March 1st, we will be extending
CEE VEE, DUMONT, PADUCAH
UNITED METHODIST PARISH
VALLEY VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
JEFF MESSER, Pastor
MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. EDWARD HART, Pastor
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
LUTHER PORmER, Pastor
DUMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
BILLIE JOE CROSS, Pas to I
ATTEND CHURCH
EVERY SUNDAY
DUMONT METHODIST CHURCH
PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor
so
overcome
CEE VEE METHODIST CHURCH
REV. PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor
CEE VEE BAPTIST CHURCH
JAMES SMITH, Pastor
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
REV. JAMES A. RICHARDSON, Pastor
The Post Publishing Company
Serving Cottle-King Counties for 59 Years
. Owner - Publisher
Entered as second class matter at the Post ice at
Paducah, Texas, 79248, under the Act of March,30, 1879
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Cottle and adjoining counties, $3.50'per year
Elsewhere, $4.50 per year
The Paducah Po§t is an independent Democratic
Newspaper, publishing the news impartially and
supporting what it believes to be right regard-
less of party policies.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
ROBERT GLENN, Pastor
CHURCH OF CHRIST
F.R. YEAKLEY, Minister
IHE
MUC,
ST. ELIZABETH’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
REV. DERMOT
I
L
■fir’ll
TEI
Mulkey Insurance AgeO^
1
4
I ■■
Animal Health-Seminars on
beef cattle, horses, poultry,
swine, dairy cattle and feedlot
management will highlight the
4th annual Southwestern Animal
Health Conference, March 18-
19, at the new convention center
in Waco. The conference is
being sponsored by the Te^as
Veterinary Medical Associat-
ion and Texas A&M University
for livestock producers in a
five-state area.
member'
be forced to charge a l’/2% Service Charge
not paid by the 10th of
IK ’
f (fa
County Agent's News
By l. m. McCarroll
i M
I B
I IB
111
"I fl
TO
STEER BY
u
fa
I
I
I
I
, .■ <
■
Willi
IMgal Mil
With spring drawing near,
many homeowners will be test-
ing their “green thumbs*’ and
putting in gardens. However,
before taking that initial step,
consider a control program for
soil pests that may attack
plants.
Soil insects can give home
gardeners a lot of trouble,
points out the agent. Most com-
mon are wireworms, white
grubs, rootworms, cutworms,
mole crickets and stalk borers.
Applying an insecticide two
to three weeks before planting
the message. This year’s theme
is “All Joy Be Yours.”
Readers are to be Mrs. Philip
Widmer and Miss Beulah Pat-
ton. Mrs. Boyd Loar and Mrs.
Marvin Smith will present
special music.
A covered dish luncheon is
to be served at 12 noon.
Everyone is invited to the
program and luncheon.
Directors for “Texas,” to be
held from June 22 through Aug.
26, continue to hold auditions
for actors and dancers who
have “a command of the stage,
voices which can be heard out-
doors, who understand
character motivation and who
can convey a variety of
emotion.”
Persons who meet these re-
quirements are urged to send
tapes in which the range of the
singer’s voice is hown or of a
memorized scene from a play
that reveals his grasp of
emotions to “Texas,” Box 268,
Canyon, Tex. 79015.
Mrs.
5rtn
ftie and
’ throu^
fternooi
the h°
I and th
W- i
1
I!’ T
jil Mpi!
■ill
IB'i
I • !•! W
Bi
’
i\ '
To Observe World Day Of Prayer
The Christian Women’s Fel-
lowship of First Christian
Church will be hostess to the
Women’s Society of Christian
Service, First United Metho-
dist Church, for an annual
World Day of Prayer obser-
vance at 11 a.m. Friday, March
3, said Mrs. J.R. Bigham,CWF
president.
Mrs. Robert Glenn will bring
f
FIRST BAPTIST C [URCH
REV.ROBERT BECK, 1 Star
ASAMBLEA DE DIOS CHURCH
REYES MARTINEZ, Pastor
-■./ . I
-
"L >
i
A-A;
Take a look at the new gas
dryers at your gas appliance
dealer. Then do something nice
for yourself.
And your pocketbook.
A Lone Star Gas
go
’""'•‘■-.A'j . ■ --
Electric Drying
|
r
it
out almost wrinkle-free. Clothes
are tumbled dry, then cooled,
and gently fluffed. Automatic-
ally. Pleats stay pleated. Creases
stay creased.
All this for a cost of about
a penny a load. (Or $2.00 a ton.)
__KT
CEE VEE CHURCH OF CHRlS^
JIM FARREN, Minister Jl I h I
ANTtOCH BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. ELI COOPER, Pastor
ATI. z i
NO? ''
they’re four times more expensive.
Gas drying is not only easier
on your pocketbook, it also
makes life a whole lot easier.
For one thing, gas drying
practically eliminates the need
for ironing. The new gas dryers
are so gentle that clothes come
Performers Needed y°ur ?arden wmeliminate most
soil insect problems. Recom-
mended insecticides include
chlordane and diazinon. Chlor-
dane should be applied at three
to six pounds of actual material
per acre while diazinon should
be applied at two to two-and-
a-half pounds of actual material
per acre (broadcast). Diazinon
may also be banded at one pound
per acre.
Both insecticides are avail-
able in either the spray
or granular form and should
be incorporated into the top
three to five inches of soil.
Additional information on
controlling insect pests in the
home garden is available at
the county extension office.
****
Nothing adds more to the
landscape than well placed and
well selected trees. Whether a
tree will be an asset or a
detriment to your landscape
depends largely upon two
things— proper placement and
proper selection of suitable
species.
The agent gives basic points
of landscape design to keep in
mind when planting trees.
1. First of all, be aware of
the scale and proportion of the
tree species at maturity. Too
often large growning trees are
placed in areas where they
must be removed later because
they are too close to a home
or other structure. Trees may
become so massive as to
visually overcome a small
structure.
2. Limit the number of dif-
ferent tree species used in a
landscape. Too much variety
results in confusion and lack
of unity.
3. In selecting and planting
trees, consider your read-
round interest in foliage,
flowers, fruit and bark as well
as proper shade and sun needs
and a balance between ever-
green and deciduous trees.
Trees should be a part of an
overall landscape plan. Re-
gardless of who places the
trees, plan the overall develop-
ment first so as to avoid costly
moving and other mistakes.
The agent reminds home-
owners that a tree is a living
investment that increases in
value continually if properly
selected, place and cared for.
****
Home gardeners complain
each year about root knot
nematodes in their tomatoes,
okra, beans and other vegetable
crops. These microscopic
worms may be the reason for
sickly plants that do not respond
to fertilizer or water.
Nematode presence can be re-
cognized by galls and knots on
plant roots.
If nematodes have been a
problem in the past, treat your
garden this spring before plant-
ing.
The most widely used
chemical for nematode control
contains dibromochloropropane
It is available at
and farm supply
I
ilaOl
■
(DBCP).
nurseries
stores.
No special equipment is
necessary for treating home
gardens. Liquid materials can
be applied with a quart fruit
jar with a ten-penny nail hole
punched on each side of the
lid—one to pour from and the
other to let air into the jar
so the liquid will pour evenly.
This jar can be used to pour
the proper amount of fumigant
diluted with water, kerosene or
fuel oil into each 100 feet of
open furrow at least six inches
deep.
Granular DBCP can be
sprinkled by hand, using rubber
gloves—into the open furrow.
In either case, cover the treat-
ed furrow immediately to pre-
vent chemical vapors from
escaping into the air.
Row treatment is made by
placing the fumigant in a six-
inch-deep furrow directly
under seed rows or transplant
rows.
Broadcast treatment can be
made by opening a six-inch-
deep furrow using a hoe, spade
or other implement. Furrows
should be no m ore than 12 inches
apart from center to center.
A broadcast treatment is much
more effective than row treat-
ment; however, more fumigant
and expense is involved.
No matter which method is
used, seal the fumigant into the
Phone 492-30/3
Paducah, Tex<
Fashion Show At
Childress Tonight
A fashion show will be staged
by the Alpha Delta Omega
chapter, Beta Sigma Phi of
Childress, at 7:30 p.m. tonight,
Thursday, March 2, there in
Fair Park Auditorium. Pro-
ceeds are to be used to establish
a scholarship for a high school
girl graduate, a spokesman
said.
Using an Easter motif,
merchants will present fash-
ions modeled by Childress
women and dance students of
Gen Galle who will also offer
dance routines during inter-
missions.
1||B
■«ii
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor
will ill!
ifcW,
Ito
I I®' I
I Fl » I ‘ i)
<3
I
soil by dragging a weight board
over the area immediately after
treatment. Then sprinkle the
soil lightly with water.
****
Removing Thatch — Late
winter or early spring after
danger of a freeze is past is
the best time to remove thatch
from your lawn. Thatch is a
tightly intermingled layer of
living and dead systems, leave
and roots of grasses which de-
velops between the layer of
green vegetation and the soil
surface. A powered machine
(rake, verticle mower) de-
signed to remove thatch is the
best way to alleviate the pro-
blem. A rotary mower set as
low as possible can also be
used to scalp the lawn.
Illegal To Hunt
Coyotes From Air
Austin—New federal legisla-
tion makes it unlawful to hunt
coyotes from an airplane.
Although the law doesn’t,
mention the coyotes specifi-
cally, it does make it illegal
to shoot at any species of wild-
life from an airplane or to use
an airplane to pursue or harass
wildlife.
Hunting coyotes from an air-
plane has been a fairly com mon
practice in West Texas where
the animals were easy to see
on the open range.
Penalties of as
$5,000 in fines
DR. GASTON FOOTE, P J IESUE «URIW
Preaching
Jlii
> -
X. A >
,,,
III 1
I
as
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1972, newspaper, March 2, 1972; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1286592/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.