The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1992 Page: 7 of 10
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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7T 5,19
THE PADUCAH POST
PAGE 7
K-6 School Supply List
"NS3a2)
3
United Supermarket announced
8
4,537
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FINAL
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Sale Ends Saturday August 8, 1992
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11888 *2./9
880000000030088888
g 8888888 388888s
a
Texas Legends Author, Gene Shelton, Dedicates
New Novel To Dumont Resident, Shirley Hurt
Road/
Fund
The DUAL-FUEL HEAT PUMP can efficiently cool
your home in summer. Then in winter the heat pump
provides the most efficient heating for your home
during normal winter weather and can work with your
gas system to assist during extremely cold conditions.
United Store
Purchases
Greenbelt Plaza
resents
ermine
year
taxing
und by
tments
Frances Smith
Appointed To
Advisory Committee
Fifth Grade Supply List
Powe/Richards
pencils
crayons
lined notebook paper( wide ruled)
8 composition notebooks
5 folders
box for supplies
2 Kleenex (large size)
map colors
ink pens (red)
ruler (inches and centimeters)
small bottle of glue
Items may be needed through-
out the year.
The bigger the navel, the
sweeter the orange.
Sixth Grade Supply List
Folders or Trapper Keeper to
store papers
notebook paper
pencils
pens, blue/black
red pen
construction paper (1 1g pkg of
any color - black, green, orange, red
or yellow)
scotch tape
Elmers glue (no rubber cement)
map pencils
magic markers
2 boxes Kleenex
supply box
ruler/metric
large index cards
scissors
ik recently the purchase of the
g Greenbelt Plaza in Childress. The
Y United Store has been located in the
q Plaza for eight years after moving
S from its 7th Street and U.S. 287
location.
Greenbelt Plaza includes 10.328
acres of the development which in-
cludes the strip to Wal-Mart plus
the parking lot, excluding the real
estate owned by Hardee's.
United Supermarkets have been
serving the Panhandle and South
Plains since 1916, and opened its
first store in Childress in 1950.
"In our continued commitment
to Childress, we will focus on this
opportunity to build and improve
our investment, both in business
andin community efforts," said Wes
Jackson, districtmanager for United
Supermarkets, in announcing the
purchase. Kevin Goodgion is the
present manager of the Childress
supermarket.
g____
4,537
4100
4100
4100
4100
to
Mr. Jarred F. Martin
Fourth Grade Supply List
(regular ruled-not college ruled)
7 bound spirals (200 pgs at least
and no tear out spirals)
5 pocket folders with brads
Kleenex (2 boxes)
1 manila folder
scissors
glue
colors (crayolas) 24 or 48 count
#2 pencils
1 red checking pen
map colors
1 ruler-metric and customary
P.E. clothes
erasers
1 pkg construction paper
supply box
notebook
Pay for a new heat pump and its installation
on your monthly electric bill with WTU*s
Finance Plan, Call WTU for details.
8
0__
87
5,139
.4100
Third Grade Supply List
Henry
#2 pencils and erasers
school glue
sharp-pointed scissors
crayons
map colors
standard/metric ruler
looseleaf paper (white)
2 spiral notebooks
handwriting tablet
(Zaner-Bloser #2042)
3 pocket folders
school box (optional)
2 large boxes Kleenex
**Optional for math: multiplica-
tion/division flashcards
Please l abel all supplies with your
child's name.
FRIDAU
7:30 P.M.
SATURDA
5 P.H.
2nd Grade Supply List
Harrison
crayons
scissors (pointed)
Elmers School Glue
2 composition spiral notebooks
(48 pages)
4 #2 pencils
notebook and/or theme paper
tool or cigar type box for supplies
Kleenex (2 large boxes)
ruler (one side metric)
1 pkg white or manila paper
notebook for theme paper
(optional)
Mr. ‘Terry ‘Broohs
and
Mrs Linda (Broohs (Dev)
request the honour of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
on Friday, the seventh of August
nineteen hundred and ninety-two
at eight oclocf
first (Baptist Church
Paducah, ‘Texas
DON'T MISS THE
SR. CITIZEN'S
CHICKEN FRY
SUNDAY
AUGUST 9
11:30 A. M.-1 P.M.
’ addition to the Texas Legends se-
I ries, and has more than 60 maga-
l zine articles to his credit. He now
I lives in Sulphur Springs, Texas,
| where he writes novels full-time.
L-—-
294
LETS
hodeo
mous men and women in the state s
history, Shelton said.
Book 1 in the series, Last Gun:
The Legend of John Selman, was
issued in March, 1991, and quickly
sold out. Book 2, Captain Jack: The
Story of John Coffee Hays, was
published in December of 1991. Book
4, Tascosa Gun: The Story of Jim
East, is scheduled for release in late
December of this year.
Four more novels in the series
are under contract with additional
worksin the planning stage, Shelton
said. The Texas Legends series is
published in hard cover by
Doubleday, a division of Bantam-
Doubleday-Dell, under the Double
D Western imprint.
Shelton is a lifelong resident of
Texas, bom in Clay County. He grew
up on a ranch in the Texas Pan-
handle, where he worked as a cow-
boy, horse breaker and trainer, and
rode the amateur rodeo circuit as a
bull rider and calf roper.
He is a graduate of West Texas
State University, as is his sister.
Shelton is a former newspaperman
and is the author of several books in
IW
2eh
Second Grade Supply List
Wilson
3 #2 pencils
notebook paper-regular ruled
supply box
crayons -16 count box
Elmers Glue
ruler-metric on onelside
scissors
2 boxes of Kleenex (large)
large eraser
notebook or holder for paper
1 pkg construction paper
2 spiral notebooks
1 tablet
■ •
Gene Shelton
Texas Legends Author
dill
Ms. Frances Smith, R.N., the
administrator of Childress Regional
Medical Center, has recently been
appointed to the advisory commit-
tee for the Texas Outstanding Ru-
ral Scholar Recognition Program.
The program is administered by the
Texas Center for Rural Health Ini-
tiatives; Ms. Smith was appointed
by the Center's Executive Commit-
tee.
Smith was nominated along with
28 other rural hospital administra-
tors throughout Texas by the
Center's Executive Director Bryan
Sperry. She joins 10 other people
with experience in health care
practice, student financial aid, and
health care educaiton on the advi-
sory committee.
Outstanding Rural Scholar Pro-
gram Administrator William J.
Lydon says, "The advisory
committee's primary responsibili-
ties are to provide guidance and
recommendations to the Rural
Scholar Program. The advisory
committee is instrumental in as-
sisting the program with develop-
ingfuture health care professionals
for rual Texas. It also selects and
ranks rural scholars for recognition
and loan forgiveness awards and
provides recommendations to the
Center's Executive Committee."
Lydon has high praise for the
commitment and expertise of Smith,
saying, "She is dedicated to the goal
of the Rural Scholar Program: to
grow anewgeneration ofrural Texas
health care professionals."
The Outstanding Rural Scholar
Recognition Program encourages
rural Texas communities to par-
ticipate in the education and re-
cruitment of health care profes-
sionals. Under the program, com-
munity sponsors and the state
jointly provide financial assistance
to students in health care education
programs in return for a commit-
ment by the students to practice
their health care professionsin the
sponsoring communities.
The program now has 20 stu-
dents enrolled in medical, nursing,
and allied health programs at edu-
cational institutions all across
Texas. The Outstanding Rural
Scholar Recognition Program en-
courages rural Texas communities
to participate in the education and
recruitment of health care profes-
sionals. Under the program, com-
munity sponsors and the state
jointly provide financial assistance
to students in health care education
programs in return for a commit-
ment by the students to practice
their health care professions in the
sponsoring communities.
The program now has 20 stu-
dents enrolled in medical, nursing,
and allied health programs at edu-
cational institutions all across
Texas. The Outstanding Rural
Scholar Recognition Program will
be accepting applications for new
scholars in September. Call the
Center for Rural Health Initiatives
at (512) 479-889ifor more informa-
tion.
—nen
Kindergarten Supply List:
8 oz Elmer's School Glue
No. 2 pencils (perferable skinny)
eraser
metal school scissors
8 COUNT skinny crayons -2 pkg
1 pkg manilia paper
2 pkg solid construction paper
(any color)
2 boxes 250 count Kleenex
1 towel or mat for naps
supply box
1 large spiral notebook
This list is specific for a reason.
Please buy the items as specified!
Please label ALL of the items with
the child's name. If you have any
questions, please call Suzanne
Paschall, 492-3029 or Debbie Wil-
liams, 492-3210.
in the state of Texas."
Subtitled The Story of Print Ol-
ive, the novel follows Olive's career
from his release as a prisoner of war
through his rise and eventual fall as
one of the most powerful and influ-
ential cattlemen in two states.
"After the Civil War," Shelton
said, "Print Olive went home to
Williamson County in Central Texas
determined to make his fortune in
the cattle business. He took what
land and livestock he wanted by any
means available, usually a gun or
rope."
Olive's methods were "unethical
at best and illegal at worst, but they
were effective," Shelton said. Olive
became one of the most powerful
and most feared men in Central
Texas, and later in Nebraska after
vigilantes ran him out of Texas.
It was in Nebraska that Print
Olive finally stepped over the line of
"acceptable violence" in his deal-
ings with homesteaders and others
who stoodin his way, Shelton added.
"Rawhider is a portrait of a vio-
lent man in violent times, a man
who did more than his share to
make the Old West the dangerous
place it was," the author said.
The Texas Legends series is a
sequence of historically accurate,
biographical fiction novels about
some of the more famous and infa-
E=T.A
WEST TEXAS UTILITIES COMPANY
== Wyr0
A Member of The Central and South West System
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MAn Hiji It e Immape hae
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The latest novel by the brother of E7
aDumontresidenthasbeenreleased
by Doubleday Publishing Co. of New 8
York.
Rawhider, Book 3 in the Texas
Legends series by Gene Shelton,
borther of Shirley Hurt of Dumont,
is now available in major bookstores. S.
The fictionalized biography of ,
early Texas cattleman and gunman
Isom Prentice (Print) Olive is dedi- '
cated to Mrs. Hurt, a school teacher
at Guthrie and wife of Tongue River
Ranch cowboy Jay Hurt.
According to the author, Print , <
Olive was "one of the meanest men v
and gunfighters ever to fork a horse $s
"ESP
WRuyN
BNN°eG
First Grade Supply List
Ryan-Rhodes
crayons (no more than 16)
scissors
glue
2 erasers
1 ruler (standard & metric unit)
school box
manila drawing paper
asstd. construction paper(9xl2)
1st grade writing tablet
2 boxes Kleenex
1 spiral notebook
4 #2 pencils
-TTniaceitwith
a system that can help lower
bills this winter -
L FUEL HEAT PUMIP!
PADUCAH, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5,1992
HALL SCRUGGS & CO.
492-3044 .............................. -9th
•••ee•eeeee••••••ee°
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Taylor, Jimmye C. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1992, newspaper, August 5, 1992; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1414045/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.