The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 11, 1949 Page: 5 of 10
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THE PADUCAH POST PADUCAH, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUG. 11, 1949
r
New Convenience! Easiest car ever made to get
into and out of! Women enter and leave
with dignity. Common sense engineering of
wider doorways, and natural step-in entrances
make it seem absurd ever to have to
wrestle your way in and out of a car.
l\ew Yorker 4-door sedan with
PKESTOMATIC FLUID DRIVE* TRANSMISSION
—drive without shifting
New Smoother Driving! Chrysler’s mighty
Spitfire engine now has still higher
compression for faster acceleration?
smoother response. And along
with its better all-around
performance goes an amazing
new Waterproof Ignition System
that’s exclusive with Chrysler. You can drive through
high water or play a hose on the engine but it
won’t stall. You get quicker starting, even in dampest
weather, smoother idling; longer life. To really
appreciate this fine car ask for a demonstration today!
♦gyrol Fluid Drive
New Wider Chair-Height Seats! We don’t
& fold you up like a "jackknife.” You
i sit comfortably in seats the height
of your easy chairs at home. We’ve
more headroom, legroom, and
HY^ shoulder room for you. And no other
car has ever been so completely
engineered from the fundamentals up for your
comfort, your convenience, your peace of
mind. You don’t even have to press a starter button.
Turn the ignition key and the engine purrs.
New Easier Steering! In one of
. „ I the great advances since the
<4*^ war, we give you new "center
control” steering. For the
first time, tie rods of equal
length give you balanced control. There’s no wheel fight.
There’s greater road stability, easier handling, less
road shock. Yes, and greater safety, too—for every-
thing about this car is designed for safer driving. The
new instrument cluster, in your line of vision
on the steering wheel, reduces driving strain.
SAVE
MONEY
JOIN
THRIFT
ACCOUNT
AT
Stinson’s
Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Scott and
daughter have recently moved
from Grand Saline back to Padu-
cah to make their home.
For Athletes Foot
USE T-4-L BECAUSE
It has greater PENETRATING
POWER. With undiluted alcohol
base, it carries the active medi-
cation DEEPLY, to kill imbedded
germs ON CONTACT.
IN ONE HOUR
You MUST be pleased or your
40c back at any drug store.
Apply FULL STRENGTH for
athletes foot, F. O. (foot odor),
itchy or sweaty feet. Today at
BIGHAM DRUG CO.
FOR
HAY-FEVER
RELIEF
NoZ-EENE
cr~i FOR THE NOSE r=»
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
SEND $2.00
THE NOZEENE CO.
P. O. BOX 66
KILGORE. TEXAS
WHY SUFFER?
Prepared by State Game
Warden John R. Wood in co-
operation with the Brownwood
Chamber of Commerce and
the Brown County Sportsmen
Club.
Good catches of crappie at
Lake Brownwood featured the
fishing report issued today by
State Game Warden John R.
Wood.
The lake is now three feet
below spillway level and clear
on both* channels.
Wood said the Jim Ned chan-
nel in the vicinity of Hallford’s
Docks is about the best spot
on the lake for crappie.
His reports from various docks
and camps includes:
HALLFORD'S DOCKS: Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Trice of Lamesa
caught 115 crappie in three
days of fishing. Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Cooper of Denver City
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trice of
Lamesa landed 75 crappie and
five good channel cat. Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Hallford and their son
and daughter, L. Gerguson of
Brownwood and Mrs. Lillie
Horseman and W. E. Hallford
of Thrifty landed a limit of
175 crappie. Rip Price, Truman
Fritz and Bobby Rayon of Bangs
took 75 crappie. James Horse-
man of McCamey and Roy Early
of Bangs landed 23 crappie. W.
L. Gray of Bangs and Kenneth
Gray of Corpus Christi caught
30 crappie. Jean, Ronald and
Kent Hallford of Thrifty took
41 crappie. Truman Chick of
Bangs and Kenneth Durden of
Roscoe brought in 42 crappie.
R. H. Hallford, Ronald Hallford,
T. E. Hallford and James Horse-
man took 93 crappie. Drug Vin-
son of Santa Anna caught a
6V2 pound yellow cat. Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Stone of Plain-
view landed five channel cat
and 40 crappie. John Green and
Johnnie Walters of Bangs
brought in 44 crappie, while
Worth Thomason, Jimmie Seward
and Wade Thomason, landed the
same number. Mr. and Mrs.
J. L. Harrison caught 40 crappie,
H. L. Beard and Cotton Wilson
>f Bangs 35 crappie.
GAINES LODGE: E. F. Young
and party cf Fort Worth landed
black bass, 15 crappie and six
channel cat. O. O. McDonald of
North Cowden brought in six
crappie, seven channel cat and
three black bass. J. W. Nunn,
^oioraao City landed 15 crap-
oie, 12 channel cat and six
black bass. Arnold Kirk, Fort
Worth, and E. Ray, Dallas, took
six black bass, an eight-pound
mellow cat and 10 white bass.
Jim Chambers of Brownwood
landed 15 channel cat and five
Created by CHRYSLER
HALL-SMITH MOTOR CO. South Main St. Paducah Texas
black bass. Andy Gaines reports
fishing has been fairly good
on the docks at night.
LEWIS BOAT DOCKS: Curtis
Hardwick of Bangs turned in
his limit of 25 crappie. Mr. and
Mrs. J. K. Harrison landed 23
crappie. Charles Carroll in three
days of fishing caught 50 chan-
nel cat. W. V. Crews, R. O.
Rankin and Fred Cockrell of
Gorman caught 75 crappie. Mr.
and Mrs. T. Thompson and Mr.
AChange is in Order,
and Mrs. Foster Moore landed
their limit of crappie.
WILKIN'S BOAT DOCKS: Mr.
and Mrs. Milton M. Johnson and
Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Williams
landed a three-pound black bass
and three channel cat. Ely
Damron in one evening of fish-
ing brought in five channel cat,
a five-pound blue cat, 15 crappie
and five white bass.
Change to OlL~PLATlN&!
Better Protection!:;: Safe-
guard your new car with Conoco
N*A Motor Oil. There’s an ex-
clusive additive in Conoco N**
that fastens an extra shield of
lubricant right to the metal
surfaces. That’s Oil-Plating!
Safe Starts!.:: Oil-Plating
holds fast. It can’t all drain
down, not even overnight. No
metal-gouging “dry-friction”
starts in the morning with an
Oil-Plated engine!
Saves Your Car! . . . Oil-
Plating is always there—a buffer
against wear. Even when the oil
itself has been squeezed out by
high loads, high speeds or high
temperature, Conoco N*A extra
shield protects moving parts.
Lets You Brag! . . .
because another additive
in Conoco N*A fights
sludge and carbon . . .
keeps repair bills low!
Oil-Plate today at your
Conoco Mileage Merchant’s!
Copyright 1949, Continental Oil Company
PADUCAH SERVICE
STATION
INTERSECTION HIGHWAYS 70 and 83
WALTER MILLER. Mgr.
NORTH CONOCO
STATION
NORTH MAIN ON HIGHWAY 83
WH2TENER & NELSON
PHONE 17-J
World’s Largest
S.S. Convention
To Meet Sept. 7-9
The world’s largest Sunday
School convention will meet in
San Antonio September 7-9.
Over 5,000 Sunday School work-
ers from all over Texas are ex-
pected at the conference being
planned by the state Sunday
School department of the Bap-
tist General Convention of Tex:
as.
Nine well-known pastors, edu-
cators, Sunday School leaders
and teachers are to speak before
the convention. Fourteen others
will lead conferences for every
age-group as well as special
conferences on music, library
work, and church architecture.
Arrangements for the meeting
are being made by Andrew Q.
Allen, state secretary for the
Sunday School department. Dr.
W. L. Howse, Ft. Worth, is
president of the state organiza-
tion and will preside at the con-
vention. Sessions of the three-
day meeting are to be held in
the (First Baptist church and the
municipal auditorium, San An-
tonio.
Among the speakers to appear
before the Sunday School work-
ers are Dr. Forrest Feezor, pas-
tor, First Baptist church, Waco;
Dr. W. R. White, president, Bay-
lor university, Waco; Perry M.
Hayden, president of the
Dynamic Kernels Foundation,
Tecumseh, Michigan; Earl Gas-
ton, Pensacola, Florida, Sunday
School superintendent.
Dr. J. M. Price, Southwestern
Baptist seminary, Ft. Worth;
Dr. H. H. Hobbs, ipastor, First
Baptist church, Oklahoma City;
Dr. J. Howard Williams, execu-
tive secretary of the Baptist
General Convention of Texas;
Dr. J. H. Landes, pastor, First
Baptist church, Wichita Falls;
and Dr. Ellis Carnett, pastor,
Travis Avenue Baptist church,
Ft. Worth.
Texas Baptist Sunday Schools
now have a total enrollment of
more than 700,000, Mr. Allen
said.
ing and Furniture Repair, 50c;
Make It of Leather, 15c; Wrist
Watches, Pocket Watches, Stop
Watches, and Clocks, 50c; Build-
ing With Logs, 15c; Photography
(1947, 2 volumes), $1.75 per
set; and Unarmed Defense for
the American Soldier (JUDO),
50c. You may also write for a
more complete hobby list, free.
Try the Post Want Ads. Thev
get results tf
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Mayes,
Mr. and Mrs. Delwin Brooks and
Mr. and Mrs. Billie J. Holley
left Saturday for a three weeks’
vacation to points of interest in
Canada. i
HOBBY BOOKS LISTED IN
POST OFFICE LOBBIES
The following Government
publications may be secured
from the Superintendent of
Documents, Government Print-
ing Office, Washington 25, D. C.,
according to a poster on display
at all post offices:
A Description of U. S. Post-
age Stamps, 1847-1947, 45c; You
Can Make It Series (3 volumes),
45c per set; Camp Stoves and
Fire Places, 50c; Aunt Sammy’s
Radio Recipes, 30; Woodwork-
AMERICA
PLAY
VACATION! They’ve picked time and place,
and they’ve planned and saved for months.
That’s the American way—the way of free
choice—so familiar we take it for granted. A
man picks his job, leaves it freely for a better
one. He chooses the town he’ll work in, the
house where he’ll live. He saves or spends as
he wishes.
It’s not that way everywhere. In some coun-
tries, the government puts a man
in a city, a house, a job, with no ^
choice in the matter. He can’t
quit, leave town or move around
the corner without permission. If
he gets a vacation, he is told
where and when to go. The gov-
ernment runs everything, the
people nothing. That’s what happens when a
free people turn over their responsibilities to
their government. They also turn over their
freedom of choice. Socialism is the result. How
does Socialism happen? Not overnight. It is
woven slowly, a thread at a time, into the
bonds of slavery. Little by little the govern-
ment assumes powers other than governing
—until it finally assumes all power.
You, here in West Texas, would be as-
tounded by the various ways and means that
some formerly good statesmen in Washington
have been politically jockeyed and pressured
into succumbing in many instances to the So-
cialistic planners that have infected our gov-
ernment and good old-line political parties.
Through acquiescence against the better
judgment of some of our statesmen, our Fed-
eral government has already embarked on
political, bureaucratic duplications and the
taking over of private businesses
with your tax funds.
This is true not only in our in-
dustry in some eastern locations,
but the bureaucrats are now
openly aiming at banks, insur-
ance, steel, railroads, mines, for-
ests and many other private busi-
nesses that have so helped this country to
grow, produce and prosper. This is how Social-
ism got its political wedge and hold in such
non-producing countries as England is today
and it is why such countries are not producing
but are leaning~on us.
Talk to your friends and neighbors; see how
they feel about this Socialism and other politi-
cal “Isms” in Washington that are threatening,
your American way of life, decreasing your
liberties and increasing your taxation.
WestTexas Utilities
Company/
/
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Hinds, Alfred. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 11, 1949, newspaper, August 11, 1949; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1015799/m1/5/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.