The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 21, 1964 Page: 4 of 12
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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THE PADUCAH POST. PADUCAH, TEXAS. THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1964
CEE VEE NEWS
Mrs. T. A. Riddell
Troy Riddell visited in Lub-
bock Friday night with Mr. and
Mrs. Jackie Smith and Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Nelson
of Abilene were dinner guests
Sunday in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Tobias.
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Timmons
and family visited in Lockney
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Seal.
Mrs. C. M. Horton visited her
sister, Mrs. Alice Lesley, in
Quanah Monday.
Mrs. Vertna Bumpus return-
ed to Temple Sunday for a
sheck-up.
Mrs. Bobby Jones and sons
visited in Childress Monday
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
3. F. Sims.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Still-
well of Childress were dinner
guests Sunday in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ballard.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Raby and
sons of Vigo Park were dinner
guests Sunday in the home of
Mrs. Mae Lawrence.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy H. Crain
and son visited Saturday night
and Sunday in Lockney with
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Seal.
Mr. and Mrs. Ova Seal visit-
ed in Flomot with Mr. and Mrs.
J. E .Monk.
Mrs. Paul Rains and Candy
visited in Dumas last week-end
with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Harris.
Glen Neal Seal and Timmy
There is a certain sadness
around the capital. An old
friend is about to depart.
That old friend is the ma-
jestic Walton building. For
many years it was the home
of the Game and Fish Commis-
sion (now part of the State
Parks and Wildlife Commis-
sion). The building soon is to
be demolished, by order of the
58th Legislature, to make way
for a parking lot.
The white limestone build-
ing with its fanciful towers and
elegant facade is an old-timer.
Built in 1875, it was the Travis
County Courthouse until 1929,
when Gov. Dan Moody and the
Legislature bargained and pur-
chased the building for the state
for $40,000.
Stasik*™
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Smart as a station
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Moran visited in Lockney last
week-end with Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Seal and attended the
rodeo.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Boykin
of Tell visited Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Lock Seal.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Benham of
Tell visited Friday with Mr. and
Mrs. Lock Seal.
Leon Raby of Vigo Park visit-
ed Sunday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Barlow.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Monson
were in Lubbock Thursday for
Mrs. Monson to have a check-up
and visited Thursday night in
Levelland with Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Morton.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mon-
son and family visited in
Stamford Sunday with Mr. and
| Mrs. Leroy Lundgren.
j R .M. Crain delivered his last
j sermon Sunday for the Method-
ist Church here. He and Mrs.
I Crain are moving to Camben,
! Ark. Their son, Hoyt Crain of
' Childress, was here Sunday and
I took his parents out to dinner
j in Memphis.
I Mrs. Annie Williams of Good-
lett visited Thursday with Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Horton.
Although the Walton build-
ing was best known to sports-
men and conservationists com-
ing to call on the Game and
Fish Commission, it also was
the home of the vocational edu-
cation area office of the Texas
Education Agency, the Rehabil-
itation District office, and the
Texas Aeronautics Commission.
Just when the Walton build-
ing will be demolished is a de-
cision due to be made by the
State Building Commission,
composed of Gov. John Connally,
Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr, and
Charles Coates of Chappell Hill,
chairman of the Bord of Con-
trol.
POLLUTION BY SALT WA-
TER — At the request of the
Railroad Commission Atty. Gen.
Waggoner Carr is reconsidering |
his opinion that the Texas Wa- j
ter Pollution Control Board has
jurisdiction and permit-grant-
ing power over oilfield waste
disposal.
Oil operators told a special
committee reviewing the opin-
ion that much of the oil in-
dustry has not accepted the new
Board’s purisdiction, and look
instead to the Railroad Com-
mission for disposal regulation.
Water conservationists sup-
port the Board’s authority,
claiming that the 1961 Legisla-
ture gave the Pollution Control
Board jurisdiction over pollu-
tion by oil and salt water in
Art. 7621d.
Only Two Accidents
Reported by Highway
Patrol For April
The Highway Patrol investi-
gated two rural accidents in
Cottle County during the month
of April, according to Sergeant
D. R. Dowdy, Patrol Supervisor
of this area.
These wrecks accounted for
one person injured and an esti-
mated property damage of
$710.00.
The rural accident summary
for Cottle County from January
through April of 1964 shows a
total of ten crashes resulting in
one person killed, nine persons
injured, and an estimated prop-
erty damage of $6,420.00.
Schools will soon be out and
children will be popping out in
all directions. They will be
running from behind parked
cars, trees, or shrubs. Watch for
children coasting down sloping
driveways and streets. Another
dangerous spot is around bridg-
es along highways where chil-
dren may have been playing,
swimming, or fishing under-
neath the bridge.
This means that motorists
must be constantly on the alert
at all times during the summer
months for children popping out
from unexpected places. Re-
member, children are unpredict-
able. The Sergeant stated, “Let
every child be a living warn-
ing sign.”
Six Flags to Host Baptist Youth Festival
REDISTRICTING HEARING
SET — First meeting of the
Texas Legislative Council Com-
mittee on Congressional redis-
tricting is tentatively set here
for the weekend of May 30.
Sen. George Moffett of Chil-
licothe, chairman, said he prob-
ably will call an informal ses-
sion at that time, as most study
committee members will be in
Austin anyway for President
Johnson’s address at the Uni-
versity of Texas.
Hearings in major cities over
the state, to seek public advice
on how to carve up districts on
an equal-population basis under ! day, May"23
court order, will begin after the ■
second primary elections, June 6. | The girls will have a chance
Moffett, Texas’ oldest law- to complete some of the badge
maker in point of legislative | requirements during this outing,
service, said he doesn’t think
GS Troop 22 Plan
Camp and Cook Out
Friday, May 22
The Girl Scout Troop 22 will
have an end-of-the-year camp-
ing and cook out Friday, May
22, at the cabin.
Girls will meet at the Scout
Cabin at 4:00 p.m. Friday, cook
their supper in the park, andl
spend the night in the cabin,-,
dismissing at 8:30 a.m. Satur- j
Plans for the state-wide Baptist
Youth Festival to be held at Six
Flags Over Texas on June 2,
gained momentum with the an-
nouncement that an almost com-
plete roster of program person-
alities has been confirmed.
Principal speaker for the giant
Youth Rally to close the all-day
activities at the family recreation
center between Dallas and Fort
Worth, will be professional foot-
ball star Bill Glass.
Glass, a Baptist preacher study-
ing at Southwestern Seminary in
Fort Worth, is a defensive end for
the Cleveland Browns. He was a
member of the 1962 National
Football League All-Star defen-
sive team and an All-America
football star at Baylor University.
The festival program, which
places emphasis on spiritual val-
ues combined with good, clean
Christian fun, has already enlisted
many outstanding choir groups
as well as leading personalities
in the field of television, motion
pictures and sports to appear on
the program.
Among them are All-American
tackle Scott Appleton and the
“Golden Toed” Tony Crosby, both
active Baptists and stars of the
1963 National Champions Uni-
versity of Texas football team.
Gregory Walcott, leading char-
acter in NBC’s “87th Precinct”
series; Miss Pam Baird, pert
singer and actress who starred in
the “Wonderful World of The
Brothers Grimm”, “Good Morn-
ing, Miss Dove”, “The Remark-
able Mr. Pennypacker” and a host
of other motion picture and tele-
vision productions; Bob Turnbull,
key performer in many TV shows
such as “Arrest and Trial”, “Go-
ing My Way”, “The Millionaire”
and “Dr. Kildaire”; Ray Hilde-
brand, popular singer and song
writer whose record of “Hey
Paula” was the nation’s number
one song hit for four weeks last
year and sold over a million
copies; Miss Linda Loftis, tal-
ented singer and beauty who was
named “Miss Texas” in 1961 and
runner-up in the Miss America
Pageant that year.
Ten youth choirs from Baptist
churches throughout the Lone
Star State will present special
musical programs, and the
Hardin-Simmons University the-
atre group will offer a dramatic
presentation depicting the roles
Baptists have played in the early
history of Texas.
Arrangements for the big day
and tickets are being handled
through the local Baptist
churches.
All the regular rides and at-
tractions at Six Flags will be
in operation throughout the day,
in addition to the special sched-
ule of five different Youth Festi-
val events and testimonies.
Argentina was discovered in
1516 by Juan Diaz de Solis. ^
The bird urbot lays 14,000,
000 eggs.
Ffesfc
the public is nearly as inter-
ested in the problem of redis-
tricting as political furor over
recent court action indicated.
He indicated there will be
no revelation of the study com-
mittee’s final recommendations
for a redistricting bill before
the Legislature convenes in
January.
All members of the troop are
urged to attend.
“Bring a bed-roll and plan
for a good time,” stated Mrs.
Joe Sparks.
Mrs. Sparks, Mrs. Bobby May-
berry and Mrs. Pressley Canon
will be supervisors for the over-
I night outing.
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THE PADUCAH POST
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morning
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ten, timely. That's what you get
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RADIO COMMUNICATIONS proved vital in
the hours immediately after the Alaska earth-
quake of March 27 because of the need to call
for outside help despite the destruction of land
lines and power systems. Ernie Hewett (left),
Alaska state officer for the Radio Amateur Civil
Emergency Service (RACES), used a civil de-
fense radio in his car to help fill in the gap.
He also directed other radio “hams” at the State
Civil Defense command post in Anchorage
(right) in setting r.p the first emergency com-
munications net tying in military, civil defense
and commercial radio facilities to get help where
and when needed in a land of vast distances.
F.D.A.F.
>aducah Motor Co.
PADUCAH, TEXAS
Jesse Moore Given
Safe Driver Award
Army Specialist Five Jesse W.
j Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jess
] Moore, Paducah, received a safe
driver award, while assigned to
the 109th Transportation Com-
pany near Ludwigsburg, Ger-
many, April 27.
Specialist Moore achieved
recognition for his outstanding
safety record and skill in the
operation and maintenance of
military vehicles.
The 41-year-old soldier, as-
signed as a truck driver, enter-
ed the Army in February 1961
and has been overseas since
.December 1959.
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Notice of the Names of Persons Appearing as the Owners
of Unclaimed Accounts Held By:
First National Bank
Box 666
Paducah, Texas
This notice is given and published pursuant to Section 3, Article 3272b, Revised Civil
Statutes of the State of Texas, in an effort to locate persons who are the depositors or
owners of amounts in accounts that have remained inactive or dormant according to
the provisions of Article 3272b for more than seven (7) years.
The unclaimed amounts due the depositors or owners listed herein will be paid upon
proof of ownership at the office of the named depository within nine (9) months, and
if unclaimed thereafter they may be subject to report and conservation by the State
Treasurer in accordance with said Article 3272b.
Names of Missing Depositors
Campbell W. W.
Fields, J. B.
Massey, A. E.
Sevier Oil & Gas Co.
Work, J. B.
Last Known Address
Paducah, Texas
Paducah, Texas
Paducah, Texas
Paducah, Texas
Paducah, Texas
AFFIDAVIT OF DEPOSITORY OFFICER
THE STATE OF TEXAS, COUNTY OF COTTLE
Before me, the undersigned authority, on this day personally appeared George V.
Deaton, who, after being by me duly sworn, deposes, says, and certifies as true the fol-
lowing:
1. That he is V. P. & Cashier of First National Bank, the Depository named in the
above Notice.
2. That the foregoing is a full and complete list of the names of all depositors and
creditors for whom deposits or inactive ccounts have been held for more than seven
(7) years and whose existence and whereabouts are unknown to the Depository. J
' ■ iSpi f
3. That such listed depositors and creditors have not asserted any claim or exer-
cised any act of ownership with respect to their deposits or accounts during the
past seven (7) years.
(Signature) GEORGE V. DEATON
Sworn to and subscribed before me this the 13 day of May, 1964.
(Signature) J. D. STINSON, Notary Public, Cottle County, Texas
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The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 21, 1964, newspaper, May 21, 1964; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1018825/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.