The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1978 Page: 2 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 15 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:
Fairbairn
Services
1
OATS
WHEAT SEED
BARLEY SEED
BULK 0
RYE SEED
Re
Remember
(
r 2 1
4
And Rigs Ready To Go
guys we know pretty well went Hollar, Jim and Joe Caraway,
2nd Annual
Cotton Festival
Sept. 20-23
(NN\N
siW
to
=2
H
f "5
*0,
0
re
6’
#***
61
I
))
DU
THE SALE WITH THE RANCHER IN MIND.
Worship This Week At The Church Of Your Choice
I
1
FOURTH ANNUAL
DU
Dnodecctoce Sale
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
ASSAMBELA DE DIOS CHURCH
DU
4
1
UU
4
4
4
4
__a
an...amsameaaan
UU
SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS
• .-2
UU
PADUCAH CASH GRO
JETER FARM STORE
2
"2
*.,M
FIRST NATIONAL B
PADUCAH POST
%3
UU
5,
FOY’S STEAK HOUS
TOWN HOUSE MOTEL
PADUCAH HARDW
Sekg
SMITH’S DEPT. STORE
Heifers
(Due to Calve this Fall.)
CANON CONOCO
UU
60 Bred 3 Year Old Commercial
BURRUS GROCERY
Heifers
(Due to Calve this Fall.)
CARPENTER—LED
MAY’S RURAL SERVICE
CAL’S RESTAURANT
UU
WE
AND AID
‘8
THE PADUCAH POST THURSDAY.
City’s Tax Rebate Check *6,629 For Qu
John Hill is attacking
State Budget waste ...
“I’ve already started my search for waste
in the state budget. I want to be ready to
You Make Your Money By Fertilizing
We have Plenty Of Fertilizer
sive meat in the world...per
pound...except maybe caviar.
One day recently three or four
... because he knows
our taxpayers need
relief from inflation.
CEE VEE METHODIST CHURCH
REV. HENRY L. SALLEY, Pastor
N
H
DUMONT METHODIST CHURCH
REV. HENRY L. SALLEY, Pastor
I
I
GUTHRIE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. MACK TOMLINSON, Pastor
Pl
of
g’
u]
L
H
se
60 Bulls
35 Registered 3 Year Old Bred
g1
Tl
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1978
TIME: LUNCH - 11:30 AM SALE - 12:30 PM
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
REV. HENRY L. SALLEY, Pastor
tr
m
th
le
LB.
BAG
MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. BOBBY FISHER, Pastor
Hoffman.
With five tables in play,
winners were, first, Ruth Rich-
ards and Sybil Jones; tie se-
cond-third, B.L. and Avis Ann
Smith with Dottie Payne and
Doris Brothers; fourth, Laverne
Hoffman and Ola May Biddy.
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
LUTHER PORTER, Pastor
)
I p
• ;»<
ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. R. J. DIXON, Pastor
CHURCH OF CHRIST
DON CARROLL, Minister
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. HERMAN LANCASTER, Pastot
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
FREDDIE STICE, Pastor
DUMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
BILLIE JO CROSS
CEE VEE BAPTIST CHURCH
JAMES SMITH, Pastor
w
se
THE PADUCAH POST
Serving Cottle-King Counties for 69 Years
Jeter Farm Store, Inc,
Phone 492-3601 ,
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
Have you ever figured how
much per pound dove costs?
It’s probably the most expen-
ll
19
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
DANNY COOK, Pastor
DETERGEP
DAI
LIQI
ARINEQUARTEF
DE BOI
BISCUITS
NGRY
re
lil
w
pi
C
ci
q
si
!
/
WITH THE LOCAL YOKELS
TUES. NITES AT 9:00 P.M. ON CH. 5
1
!
I
Ramblin’
(Cont. from page 1)
My associates tell me this is
happening every day, all the
time, all over.
I hope that you will think
twice next time you start to give
that good buddy some informa-
tion about the “ smoky situa-
tion.” Your law enforcement
agents are paid with your
money...your taxes...and when
you complicate their job you are
wasting your own cash...besides
making life much more dange-
rous for your family, your town,
your county. The laws are made
for everybody, and all your law
officers are doing is trying to
protect the innocent from the
criminal element. Won’t you try
to help make their job easier?
*•«*«
Sale At The Post Ranch Headquarters
WEST 13TH STREET
1
II
93530
/p2
Joe and Jim Caraway
PUBLISHERS
Jimmye Taylor
EDITOR
k
26482-
Dlastc
STrips'
-‘* 0 24
K
I
4
◄
. l' i
—
m
21
(A
out to bring home the bacon
(dove) for supper.
They took two or three boxes
of shotgun shells each (a total of
nine boxes) and drove about
16-17 miles out in the country.
They didn’t have special boots,
caps and dogs, but the shotguns
they were using cost an average
of around $200 each.
They came home after about
four hours, with 12 dove bet-
ween them.
With shells costing about
$4.00 per box, lets see, that’s
$36.00. Say, gas for the trip to
the hunting place, at .63 per
gallon, 34 miles, even at 14
miles per gallon, that would be
approximately $2 worth of gas.
Then, the shotguns; if they’re
used only three of four times
this year, which is highly likely,
that’s not much wear and tear
on the new gun, so say a $200
shotgun, four of them, that’s
$800. A total of $838! Divide
that by 12 dove, and what do
you get? Well, if the breast of
dove is all you eat, which most
folks do, and a breast weighs
only about 2 ounces, that’s
$38.50 per ounce. Shall I go on?
An unbelievable $616 per pound
is what dove costs!
Dang! That would buy a lot of
sweet, juicy beef!
I.
I
' 29a
*8 • /
s" 3
Duplicate
T^Bridje
"25
‘gsse s -
•i7g
RM.n•I
I
i
1)
I
I !
J
ef,“p - J
ggs,
42
2522
was a printer, a member of the
Methodist Church, and a vete-
ran of World War II.
Survivors include his widow,
Ida; two sons, Dennis of Ama-
rillo, and Alan of Shallowater.
Two daughters, Elaine Sutter of
San Jose, Calif., and Debra
Magliano of Danville, Calif.; a
brother, Milam of Paducah, and
a sister, Nina Roland of Connec-
ticut. One granddaughter also
survives.
Pall bearers were Albert
PAGES ______________________
TEXAS PRESS
I MEMBER 1978 ASSOCIATION
nefdm
•8,
is
.I ।
5hc
HB7
—
I american/old t
IAFTC
DELPHIA
EAM(
[NATURAL HAU
IAFTC
-PIMENTO/PLAIN/
EESEV
DMA’S ASS'
ANOLA
[,*eo.
s, c-
as,
318
l
"*6N
ggzs*as2ezg8 :
227
za
"2
s
37
pGws
4,51
Gt,
PA 2
ST. ELIZABETH’S CATHOLIC CHU"
FATHER TERRY BURKE Pastor
available revenues. We’ll r ht
have to live within our "
means, because I’ll veto any new taxes.”
1,
-g.
DOUBLE U HEREFORD RANCH
/ 7
/7
AL
f ■
Exsp
MING
EXSp
8
ERY
I
d ।
l ।
I
I ■
, I
•IOHNHIII.
GOVERNOR
Paid for by John Hill Campaign Fund, Lowell Lebermann, Treasurer,
1035 Brown Bldg.. Austin TX 78701. Phone (512) 478-6489. 74=’
' I
>:
1:
I
. Iti -
a ,
.A
E
f
' c
r
1b
breeze, dampened by the
night’s dew, sweeps the sleepy
cobwebs from my mind. As I sip
my coffee, and organize my
thoughts for the day, I meditate
for a few moments on the errors
and triumphs of the day before,
and finding peace with myself, I
prepare for the day ahead.
It is pleasant to know that
only a few other people are up at
this hour...I can see my neigh-
bor Mary’s kitchen light on next
door, and know that she is
drinking her coffee and getting
organized, too, before her
family comes to life.
Yes, I definitely am a morning
person, whose clock inside
starts ticking early and runs
down about 9 or 10 p.m.
I wonder if this is my natural
wont, or if it is an acquired
habit. When I was a child, my
parents rose about 4:30 or 5
a.m. (and did all the days my
dad lived, even when we no
longer lived on the farm). The
rest of the family also rose that
early, and ate breakfast all
together. This is a habit I
cannot, for the life of me, break.
I must wake early, and I have to
eat breakfast pretty soon after
rising.
: • . ' ■ ■
..
: .....2 i
888828882888888888888
tackle overspending the '
minute I take office as
Governor in January. My a
budget office already is |
paring down big state "Ta
agency budget requests,
keep spending within A
an
1
State Comptroller Bob Bul- $306.5 million, an increase of is collected!.
lock said Friday that his office 16.3 percent over the same Office. °6
—1 — has sent checks totaling $70.1 period last year.
Here Seot 6 million to 900 Texas cities as Paducah,,
M * their September share of the The sales tax is collected by the period 1
—BY DORIS BROTHERS Services were held Saturday, local option one percent sales merchants and other sales tax
September 16, in First United tax. permit holders along with he some
The Paducah Duplicate Methodist Church, Paducah, for The September rebates raise state sales tax and rebated S8.23l 6,
Bridge Cub met Wednesday in Murray D. Fairbairn, 51. Pas- the cities’ total for the year to monthly to the cities in which it ‘ tebe
> 423
—sm
•2 1
- ,%4
—%
/v5,<
7/
X . -
Seethe “Crossroads Jubilee”
" : A0 I
the home of Hobson and John- tor, Rev. Henry Salley, offi-
nie Howell. dated.
With five tables in play, Fairbairn, a Paducah native,
winners were,first Mavis Bates died Wednesday in Richards
and Joyce Goodwin; second, Memorial Hospital. Burial was
Dottie Payne and Doris Bro- in Buck Creek Cemetery under
thers; third, Johnnie Howell and direction of Norris Funeral
Sybil Jones, and fourth Carmen Home.
Bennett and Laverne Hoffman. Bom May 19, 1927, in the
Buck Creek community, Fair-
The Friendly Bridge Club met bairn lived in St. Louis,Missour
Saturday at 7:00 p.m., in the several years before returning
Home of Billy and Laverne to Paducah 2 1/2 years go. He
DOUBLE U HEREFORD RANCH
POST, TEXAS 79356
Phones: 806/495-2310. 806/894-3183
MONTA J. MOORE. TOM COPELAND, KENNETH MARTS.
Manager Ass't. Manager Foreman
I FF—
K.-,BANE
819 8th St. - P.O. Drawer E
Paducah, Texas 79248
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. This has to be my favorite
Any erroneous refection upon the character or standing of any damp nights, and hazy,
person or firm appearing in this paper will be gladly and promptly soft mornings followed by the
corrected upon being called to the attention of the management tp the warm sun and clearest of blue
article in question.______ skies. Rambler is back her early
morning habit of “coffee on the
porch, while the rest of the
family sleeps” That has to be
the best time of my day.
All is dark, though the sky is
beginning to lighten, and a cool
I
>1
B
Em
L. M
210,420088
Misgeri
22 b 4
w‘
SN
P 'I
a I
“Buddy” Evers, Woodray
Woodley, and Leon Thompson.
g-ffus,m;
29523.
Er22-kg
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.
Taylor, Jimmye. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1978, newspaper, September 21, 1978; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1403651/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.