The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1964 Page: 3 of 8
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THE PADUCAH POST, PADUCAH, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964
THOUSAND DOLLAR SCHOLARSHIP is shown here being presented to John Prater,
Junior Chamber of Commerce vice-president from Austin, by Lamar Phillips (right), general
chairman of Interstate Automobile Association. Witnessing the presentation is H. C. Pittman,
executive vice-president to the Texas Automobile Dealers Association, sponsors of the newly
formed IAA motor club. The 1000 dollar scholarship will be given to the winner of the annual
Teenage ROAD-E-O driving competition which is sponsored by the Texas Jaycees with partici-
pation by TADA members throughout Texas. ...... j
COURTHOUSE NEWS
[1637; C. Cannon Survey No. 57,
Abstract No. 645. Total 297.3
acres.
W. W. Martin, et ux to So-
cony Mobil Oil Company, Inc.
200 acres out of Survey No. 20,
Block “E”, Matador Cattle Com-
pany and Survey No. 1, Block
No. 4, T. A. Thomson.
W. W. Martin, et ux to So-
cony Mobil Oil Company, Inc.
123.8 acres out of Survey No. 20,
Block “E”, Matador Cattle Com-
pany, and out of the North
part of Survey No. 2, James E.
Gray, Abstract Nos. 685, and
1637, respectively, and out of
Survey No. 1, Block No. 4, T. A.
Thomson, Abstract No. 1819. Be-
ing 88.67 acres out of Survey
20; 33.07 acres out of Survey
No. 2, James B. Gray; and 2.0*6
acres out of Survey No. 1, Block
No. 4, T. A. Thomson.
H. B. Biddy, et ux to Cities
Service Oil Company.
Tract One: 191.7 acres out of
Section 3, AB&M Survey, Ab-
stract No. 22.
Tract Two: 149 63 acres out
of Section No. 3, AB&M Survey,
Grady Staggs, et ux to King1; Abst. 22. Total 341.33 acres,
and Jordan. 110 acres out of i Nathan Coy Morris, et ux to
Survev 2, Block 4, T. A. Thom- Cities Service Oil Company. AM
son Survey, Abstract 820, being N/2 of Survey No. 2, D&W Ry.
SE part of a 220 ac. tract. j Co. Block 1, M. G. Morris, Ab-
The State Life Insurance stract No. 1323, 320 acres.
Company to King and Jordan. ! H. W. Matney, et ux to Cities
213-1/3 acres out of N. 1/3 of Service Oil Company.
First Tract: 153.5 acres, out
of Survey No. 3, AB&M Abst. 22.
Second Tract: 74.5 acres out
Etheridge E. Puckett, Guard-
ian of the Estate of Linda Dar-
lene Puckett, and Pat Etheridge
Puckett, minors, to King and
Jordan.
First Tract: 320 acres being
S/2 of Section 1, Block 4, T. A.
Thomson Survey, Abstract No.
819.
Second Tract: 163.3 acres out
of Sur. 1, Block 4, T. A. Thom-
son, Abstract 819. Total 483.3
acres.
Leslie E. Boykin, et ux to
King and Jordan. An irregular
shaped tract out of SW cor. of
Section 6, Abst. 824, Block 4,
T. A. Thomson. 82.277 acres, oi
which 2.45 acres are within the
limits of public county roads.
H. W. Smith, et ux to King
and Jordan. A rectangular
tract out of SE corner Sec. 6,
Abstract 824, Block 4, T. A.
Thompson. 72.296 acres, of
which 1.55 acres are within
the limits of road.
Grady Staggs, et ux to King
and Jordan. 110 acres out of
Survey 2, Block 4, T. A. Thom-
son Sur. Abst. 820.
Survey 6, Block 4, T. A. Thom-
son, A-824.
James R. Henderson, et al to __ ^
Sun Oil Company. W/2 Section 0f SE/4 Section^ 4, AB&M^Abst
9, Abstract 653, Block L, A. For-
sythe Survey, 320 acres, and the
Company, Inc., to Pat M. Hodge.
Consideration: $80. Lots 15 and
16, Block 131, Original Town of
Paducah.
D. G. Pendleton, et ux to
Amado Mendez, et ux. Con-
isideration: $1,000. All of Lots
i 10. 11, and 12, Block 17, North
|Park Addition; and all of Lots
7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, Block No.
9. North Park Addition to the
Citv of Paducah,
i
Allen L Holley, et al to Anna
Belle Holley, a widow. Con-
sideration: $10, and other good
"'nd valuable considerations.
153 acres out of N. W. 1/4 of
Survey 25, Block M. R. M.
Thomson Survey, Abst. 802, be-
ing the first tract.
Second Tract: 142 acres out
of section No. 25. R. M. Thom-
son, Block M, and W. G. Mor-
ris Homestead Survey and L. A.
Holley Homestead Survey, and
being 98.7 acres, out of Section
25, R. M. Thomson Survey, Block
M, Abst. 802, 36 acres out of the
L. A. Holley Homestead pre-
emption Survey. Abst. 1184, and
7-1/2 acres out of the W. G.
Morris Homestead pre-emption
Survey, Abst. 1139.
Third Tract: 160 aems out o?
the NE part of Survey 99, Block
A, T&NO Ry. Co. ,ju., vey-: in
Cottle and Foard Counties Tex-
as, Abst. 1047.
Fourth Tract: 320 acres, out
of N/2 of Section 18, Block
“N”, T. A. Thomson, Abst. 627.
W. L. Latimer, et ux to L. D.
Nixon. Consideration: $1,250.
ON THE WITNESS STAND
By far the most vital people
in our system of justice are
witnesses. Everyone else in a
trial exists to hear what they
have to say.
Our courts need witnesses. A
jury to find the facts. The judge
to apply the law. The lawyer
to tell his client’s story.
Chances are you worry about
stepping up, taking an oath,
and telling your story in court.
On some rare occasions you
could be called upon to testify
about something affecting your
own standing in the community.
As a witness you too may
have the right, for example, not
to testify against yourself in
somebody else’s lawsuit or crime
trial.
If you are ever in such a
bind, consult a lawyer of your
own choice on what to do. The
lawyer who called you to testi-
his client, not you. But your
lawyer is sworn to keep what
fy has a sworn duty to protect
you tell him secret and to ad-
j vise you in your own interests
I within the law.
Wise lawyers tell their wit-
! nesses to obey twelve rules:
I 1. Go to the place (say, the
j scene of an accident). Check
j your memory before you go to
court. People forget and get
caught up on details. But if
you check what you saw and
heard you are on solid ground.
2. Visit a court. Hear how
other witnesses testify. It will
help you see your role on the
witness stand.
3. Wear clean, conservative
clothes.
4. Don’t memorize your story
word for word. That is the sur-
iest way to sound bad. But think
!-
i All Lots 6. 7, 8, 9, and 10, Block
No. 214, OT Paducah.
L. D. Nixon, et ux to Travis
W. Jones, et ux. Consideration:
j $11,300. All of Lots 5, 6, 7, and
S, in Block 159, OT Paducah.
MARRIAGES
Jerry Everette Hayes and
! Miss Loretta Jean Ellis, mar-
ried July 5.
Claude Barker and Miss
C’-ervl Milner, married July 4.
Earl D Brortner Jr. and Miss
Patricia Katherine Skinner, mar-
ried July 11.
Roy Eugene Graves and Miss
Jimmie Lee Mosley, married
July 18.
Jack Calhoun Long and Miss
Jeanne Carole Elick, married
July 22.
Santos Sarni Trevino and
Miss Gilberta Garcia, married
July 25.
of what you saw and heard.
5. Listen to the question you
are asked with care and answer
thoughtfully.
6. Give a simple, direct ans-
wer in your own words. Don’t
be rushed.
7. If you err — and people
often do — correct yourself at
once. If you can’t remember
some detail, say so. Don’t bluff.
8. Tell the truth. Don’t fig-
ure which side you may help.
Don’t identify yourself with ei-
ther side.
9. Stop when the judge
breaks in, and don’t try to
sneak an answer in before he
can stop you. What you might
say could end in a “mistrial.”
10. Keep cool and don’t sass
back.
11. If they ask you: Certain-
ly, you have talked to other
people — the lawyer, for ex-
ample; and yes, you may be
reimbursed for certain of your
expenses incurred in attending
the trial.
12. Remember, without wit-
nesses our law would fail to do
justice. If you are called, be a
good witness.
HISTORY THAT LIVES — One comes
of Texas’ remaining links with 35.
the frontier are the dozen or so j-
inns that were regular stops on I
the Butterfield and other stage
lines.
travelers along Interstate
The oldest stagecoach inn,
built in 1828, stands on a farm
off State Highway 21 near
Crockett, in Houston County, j
Best preserved in the Valentine j
Hoch Place, a two-story mason- [
ry hostel at Hocheim, in DeWitt!
County. It was built in 1852. j
Probably the best-known is I
the Stagecoach Inn at Salado, in
Bell County, which still wel- 1
Framing
Kodak
Developing
r Portraits
Parker Studio
DR. P. A. PRESLAR
OPTOMETRIST
Office Hours:
MONDAY - FRIDAY, 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M.
SATURDAY, 9 A. M. TO 12 P. M.
BY APPOINTMENT
Tel. WE 7-3922 Box 869
FEES CASH
4.11 Ave. B, NE Childress, Texas
No. 1616, and Abst. No. 1366
Third Tract: 145 acres out of
E/2 of Section 10, Abstract SW part Section 4, AB&M Abst.
1340, AB&M Survey, 320 acres. 16I6. Total 373 acres.
Total 640 ac. I W. T. Can an, et ux to Cities
Clark W. Haston, et ux to ! Service Oil Company. 240 acres
Shell Oil Company. 381.5 acres ' out of Surveys Nos. 19 and 47,
as follows: IR. M. Thomson, Block “K”. and
First Tract: 161 acres NE/4 ; 64 F. P. Knott, as follows^ 108 3
Section 4, A. Forsythe, Block L,
Abstract 657.
Second Tract: 60.5 acres Sur-
vey 4, Block L. A. Forsythe,
A-657.
Third Tract: 160 acres NW/4
Survey 6, Block L, A. Forsythe,
A-656. Total 381.5 acres
acres out of said Survey No. 19
A-800, and 103 acres out of said
Survey No. 47, A-993, and 28.o
acres*out of Survey No. 64, A-
663, F. P. Knott.
Roy D. Wall, et ux to Cities
Service Oil Company. 147 acres,
out of NW corner of Survey No
Rodney R. Rochelle, single, 4, I&GN Ry- Co. Survey, Abstract
to Socony Mobil Oil Company, j No. 152.
Inc., 132 acres, Survey 30, Block j Roger W Taylor, et ux to
“N”, T. A. Thomson. j Charles Million. SE/4 Survey
Roscoe T. Tucker, a single | No. Ill, H&GN RR Company,
man, to Charles R. King and j less 25 feet off E. side for road.
John R. Jordan, d/b/a King & A-140
, Jordan. 120 acres out of T. A.
Thomson Survey 8, Block 4, Ab-
stract No. 826, James B. Gray
Survey No. 1, Abstract No. 1632,
containing 84 acres out of A. A.
Thomson Survey No. 8, Abstract
826, and 36 acres out of James
B. Gray Survey 1, Abstract No.
1632.
Norwin G. Garrison, et ux to
Shell Oil Company. 99.998 acres
out of N. part of NE/4 Section
5, Abstract 658, Block L, A. For-
sythe.
Roy N. Parks, et ux, to So-
cony Mobil Oil Company, Inc.
First Tract: 59.6 acres out of
Survey No. 57, Mrs. C. Cannon,
Abst. 645.
Second Tract: 237.7 acres out
G. R. Tippen, et ux to Char-
les Million.
First Tract: 167 1/4 acres out
of Section 111, H&GN RR Com-
pany, Abstract 140.
Second Tract: 165.9 acres out
of Section 111, H&GN RR Co.
Survey, Abst. 140. Total acres
333.15.
WARRANTY DEEDS
Bonnie Marie Pressley, et vir,
Olen A. Pressley to Jimmie W.
James, et ux. Consideration:
$2,500. All of Lots 8 and 9,
Block 41, Original Town of Pa-
ducah.
C. D. Shamburger Lumber
Company, Inc., to Houston B.
$10.00 and other considerations.
$10:00, and other considerations.
of Matador Cattle Co. Survey 9, ! Lots No. 11 and 12, Block No.
Block E, Abst. No. 686, James B. 1210, Original Town of Paducah.
Gray Survey No. 2, Abstract No. I C. D. Shamburger Lumber
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The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1964, newspaper, August 6, 1964; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1018609/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.