The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 4, 1987 Page: 1 of 10
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JSPS 418-260]
BOOK
7 9105
PREC.
.32
VOLUME 80 NUMBER 50
10 PAGES
PADUCAH, COTTLE COUNTY, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4,1987
79248
on Pat Jones Field
I
t
Mamie Burns
Banquet Set
King Co. Book
To Be Released
Deloris McWilliams
riday.
it
In Lubbock
721
Girl Scouts Begin
Cookie Sales Feb. 3
Lions Club
Valentine
> A V
Candidate
Deadline
Near
LO
32
31
31
34
34
40
40
and
each,
HI
63
65
74
63
62
62
63
GINNED IN
COTTLE COUNTY
16,112 Bales
20 bales on yard
GINNED IN
KING COUNTY
2,249 Bales
50 bales on yard
WEIGHED IN
AT COMPRESS
18,025 Bales
She yaiiittiih JJii'it
SERVING COTTLE AND KING COUNTIES FOR MORE THAN EIGHTY YEARS
Editor’s Viewpoint
—By Patty Adams
local
summer
February 3 and continuing Jackson,
Spring, as well as almost 100
Lions' Club functions all over
the Panhandle area.
Illi I
188
||i
3oZ.’S - " ""'rl
. All x •"
i ! '
bration in 1983 and wrote the fore-
ward for "This I Can Leave You.”
"Mrs. Burns was a j ‘
reverse," Murrah said. "She was
an urban, sophisticated lady who
happened to many a cowboy. She
(C<»nt. to Page 6)
’THIS I CAN LEAVE YOU* TPflpCl"
Honored
rebounds.
Burns led the way with 12
assists; Weddle, 4; Evans, 3;
Mona Long, and Flemons, 2
each, and Joy Long and Ains-
worth, 1 each. The
Dragonettes combined for 17
steals and 21 forced
turnovers.
Then on Friday night, the
conquered
A book by the first lady of the
Pitchfork Ranch for almost 25
years will be introduced February
15 at the Ranching Heritage
Center of the Museum of Texas
Tech University.
"This I Can Leave You," the late
Mamie Sypert Bums' account of
■
Community
Calendar
II
8 l l[
through February 13.
When you order the Girl
Scout cookies you are
the Magic of Girl
Cookies ’ work. The
cookies sale is the main fund-
raiser for the NorCenTex Girl
Scout Council and its troops.
The sale serves as a learning
experience for the girls by
teaching them how to handle
money as well as how to relate
to other people. In addition to
supporting local troop activi-
ties, the cookie money also
helps the NorCenTex Girl
Scout Council provide the best
Stanley Marcus of Neiman-Marcus fame is a regular
mtributor to the Dallas Morning News. His column, as often
snot, has to do with the Texas economy.
Last week he quoted State Comptroller Bob Bullock thus:
Texas, the nation's leading producer of cotton and chemicals
By Ora Lee Frazier
It was a 217-barrel producer
for Cottle County when No. 1
Pat N. Jones wildcat was
completed last week.
Scheduled to be drilled to a
total depth of 7,878 feet by Bass
Enterprises Production Com-
pany, the well flowed 46.5
degree gravity crude oil along
with five barrels of water per
day on drill stem test from an
interval of 7,375 to 7,421 feet.
Gas-oil ratio was 481-1 for
Cottle's latest producer which
is 1,400 feet from north line
and 850 feet from east line of a
particular section in the John
C. Ellison Survey.
Operator has also staked
location for No. 2 Pat N. Jones
wildcat in the same survey,
where it is seven miles south
of Paducah. Planned as an
8,000-foot prospect, the venture
is 4,300 feet from north line
and 467 feet from east line of
an unnamed section.
By Ora Lee Frazier
No candidate has yet filed
for a place on the ballot in the
April 4 elections. Three
aidermen will be selected to
serve on the city council, and
two members to the board of
trustees of the Paducah
Independent School District.
Terms of councilmen Pres-
ley Canon, Byron Garrison,
and John Ratliff will expire
in April.
Places on the school board
which will be vacant this year
are those currently held by
Brenda Fell and Dennis Rat-
liff.
P]°Peer ln Pir|g, fishing, and crocheting.
She and her husband, K. D.
have four children, three
grandsons, and one grand-
daughter..
By Will Flemons
ap' The Paducah Dragons
much testroyed the Patton Springs
1 " - - -
chiller
lanufacturing state."
exans can have a larger than ever share of the market if
alue and originality are paramount in the products.
* * *
hu ThinkYou Have Troubles?
We've all heard of the fellow who failed in business two
anes, was defeated for the state legislature, lost his sweetheart
» death, suffered a nervous breakdown, lost another election,
an for Congress and lost, ran for the Senate and lost again
afore finally being elected president. Aren't we all glad
Graham Lincoln didn't give up?
* * *
Aitor’s Lament
he typographical error is a slippery thing and sly;
ou can hunt til you're dizzy, but is somehow will get by.
ill the forms are off the presses, it is strange how still it keeps.
Shrinks down in a corner and it never stirs or peeps,
hat typographical error, too small for human eyes,
ill the ink is on the paper, when it grows to mountain size,
he boss stares with horror; then he grabs his hair and moans,
he copy reader drops her head upon her hands and groans,
he remainder of the issue may be clean, as clean as can be,
Jut that typographical error is the thingyou always sea.
BIG
Mill I
The Dragonettes are still
on the road to a district
championship after defeating
Patton Springs, and the
Guthrie Jaguars last week
with only two more games re-
Dragonettes demol- have 10 rebounds.
Leading assists was Leah
Bums with 5. The team had
available for the first time during a
reception from 2-5 p.m.
Burns lived on the Pitchfork
Ranch in Dickens and King
counties from 1942 to 1965 while
her husband, the late D Burns, was
ranch manager. Shortly before her
death in 1982, she donated her
stories of their life on the ranch to , ________
the Ranching Heritage Association its state carriers for the first
which promoted publication of the time this year.
Designated as a State Star
21 in^ the Carrier, Deloris was one of 17
carriers who received
recognition for her dedication
and concern for her cus-
tomers.
Deloris, who has been a
Paducah resident for several
years, also serves as carrier
for the Amarillo Globe,
THE
Weather
n?^ATE
Van. 27
book.
The book is no. G ‘
Centennial Series of the Asso-
ciation of Former Students by
Texas A & M University Press. D
Bums was a graduate of Texas A
&M.
The reception will include an
address by David Murrah, direc-
tor of the Southwest Collection at
Texas Tech. Dr. Murrah wrote the Tor the Amarillo Globe,
history of the Pitchfork Land and Dallas Morning News and
Cattle Co. for its centennial cele- Wichita Falls Times-Record.
When her schedule
permits, Deloris enjoys cam-
In King County, TXO
Production Corporation
completed No. 2-A Parramore
in the Pen Branch Field to
produce 100 barrels of 39
gravity crude and five barrels
of water daily from an inter-
val of 5,243 - 5,249 feet.
Scheduled total depth had
been set at 5,330 feet.
Site is 13 miles southeast of
Guthrie in the H&TC
Railroad Company Survey,
2,171 feet from south line and
2,255 feet from east line of
Section 46 in Block F.
In the Tumbleweed Field of
that county, No. 1-A Foster
Trust was also completed to
flow 52 barrels of 38.4 gravity
oil and 24 barrels of water per
day from an interval of 3,851 -
3,861 feet. The wildcat had
been slated for a total depth of
4,000 feet by Sun Exploration
and Production Co.
........
B 2558
With a gas-oil ratio of 442-
1, this latest producer is loca-
ted 17 miles east of Spur and is
489 feet from south line and
614 feet from west line of
Section 229 of Block F, H &
TC Survey.
Sabine Corporation has
staked No. 1-B Ross as a 2,900-
foot wildcat 19 miles east of
the King county seat.
Also in H&TC Survey, the
prospect is 467 feet from the
south-west line and 2,000 feet
from Block 13.
No. 10-HHHH S. B. Bur-
nett is a location staked by
Gunn Management Co. of
Wichita Falls to be drilled to a
total depth of6,300 feet.
Spotting 330 feet from north
line and 2,300 feet from east
line of Section 26 of Block 3 in
B.S. & F Survey, the wildcat
is 11 miles southeast of
Guthrie.
light, they are going to score a
)t of points."
Only one more
ame stands between 1
Iragons and the play-offs. Sheila
Methodist Minister at Trinity
United Methodist Church in
Amarillo. He has twice
pastored the fastest-growing
church in the Northwest
Texas Annual Conference
(The Panhandle) and has
pastored the best-attended
(percentage wise) in the Con-
ference. Jerry has spoken in
over 500 different settings in
Texas, New Mexico and
Oklahoma. You will enjoy
his humor and message.
Tickets are $7.50 per person -
and can be purchased from board
any Lions' Club member. I
Blast Into Second Half
J — ™ Dragonettes
By Karla Weddle
Leading rebounders were:
Gail Flemons 12, Leah Bums
and Joy Long 8, Joyce Evans
and Doris Ainsworth 7, and
Mona Long 6, while Weddle,
Davis, Cheri House, and
Mary Canales combined to
It is Girl Scout Cookie possible program for the girls
time. NorCenTex Girl Scouts throughout the council. It also
will be taking door-to-door helps support and maintain
and telephone orders in local day camps in the
Paducah, beginning summer and Camp Stonewall
T ’ , a primitive camp
site near Holliday.
Also, the money helps pro-
making vide support to council wide
Scout
annual
'This I Can Leave You," the late ~
----------------, Delons McWilliams was
life on the Pitchfork Ranch, will be honored Friday, January 23,
1987 at the Lubbock Plaza
Hotel for outstanding results
in sales, services, and
collections for the Lubbock
Avalanche Journal.
Acknowledging that 50
percent of the Journal
circulation is outside Lub-
bock, management honored
Oct: 9 a
TX
Wed. Feb. 11 - Chamber of
Commerce Board meeting, 8
^..m. Channel 5 office.
Mon. Feb. 16 - Chamber of
Commerce, noon, Dairy
Queen.
<3 *8
Special Page to
Feature Your
Special Valentine
A special way to wish your
loved ones a Happy
Valentine’s Day is to have
your child or grand-child
picture published in the
Paducah Post edition of
February 11.
Photos will be inside a
special Valentine heart. Cost
of the picture heart is $7.00 per
Valentine.
If possible, pictures should
be wallet-size; however,
The Paducah Lions' Club larger ones can also be used,
will have its Annual Sweet- color, as well as black and
heart Banquet Saturday, Feb. white will be accepted.
~ ~ - Please bring your picture to
the office by Friday, Feb. 6 to
events, up-to-date programs,
leader support and training,
(CONT. ON PAGE 2)
.....X/
iefeat the Rangers.
I Leading rebounder for the
Iragons was Flemons with
3. Hurd had 10 assists and
[urns had 8 steals.
On Friday night,
Iragons tamed the Guthrie
. aguars by a score of 133 to 40,
<. he highest ever 1
Iragons.
The Dragons were
Iryan Barnes, Stan Bums,
nd Will Flemons who had 21
Joints apiece.
" " Flemons led with 13
■ - ebounds for the Dragons.
Ihris Hurd had 14 assists
gainst the Jaguars.
Coach Ryan stated "There
wasn't one of the eleven boys
bat played, who didn't have a
[ood game. When the Dragonettes conquered the
Iragons are all clicking Guthrie Jaguars by a score of
ogether like they were Friday 74-46. Everyone had a good
l night with lots of scoring as
follows: Karla Weddle 14;
district Mona Long 13; Leah Burns
the 10; Joyce Evans 7; Joy Long 6;
, v ~” i Davis and Doris
hey play Patton Springs here Ainsworth 4 each, and
Heather Ryan 2.
Candidates may file
through 5 p.m. February 18 for
city council positions. School
I candidates may file-
through 5 p.m. March 4.
Dragonettes were Doris Ains-
worth, 11; Gail Flemons, 17; worth, 1. Altogether the
Leah Burns, 9; Joyce Evans, Dragonettes had 14 turnovers.
8; and Mona Long, 7. Karla Coach Barnes stated "It is
for the Weddle, Joy Long, Sheila the most important week of the
Davis, Cheri House and Mary season right now. We are
j led by Canales combined to have 11 playing better as a team, and
more people are playing off
the bench. We need to
continue to play and shoot
with confidence."
7,1987, at the Goodwin School
Cafeteria at 7 p.m.
Featured speaker will be ensure publication. '"8ZT Z 8.
Jerry Kunkel of Amarillo. You may pick up your photo goes to press.
Jerry is a well-known Lions' on Wednesday, February 11.
Club speaker in this are. He
has spoken at a Tri-State
Convention in Dallas, and at
Mid-Winter Conferences in
Ballinger, Amarillo, and Big
Jerry graduated from
Lamesa High School and Me-
ir man-made fibers is also the nation's sixth biggest clothing Murry College with a B.S. in
Marcus touched on aspects of Philosophy and an M.A. in
reduction within the clothing industry and intimated that Religion. He also graduated
exans can have a larger than ever share of the market if from Perkins School of Theo-
logy at S.M.U in Dallas with
a Master of Theology.
Rev. Kunkel is a United
Mducah Pom
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TwTkd . hOt* S*anBurnsstyle,is on target to adirect hit and asure two points for
Jouthri? d DragOns as zoom toward a district championship in Class A basketball.
»-t)ragons, Dragonettes
s conduct
tural Ej
iple of ai
■economu
religion,
The
test . _ _
dangers by a score of 105 to 36
ast Tuesday night.
- Leading scorer for the
[iragons was Bryan Barnes
dth 24 points. Will Flemons
ijontributed 17, Chris Hurd 13, mainingf
jlilly Hutchinson 12, and The Dragonettes
[jlanuel Garibaldi 10 points to ished the Lady Rangers last
Tuesday by a score of 69-32, bC£Uii nuu
taking first place in the first an equal amount of steals
half of district. with Burns, 7, Mona Long, Fle-
Leading rebounders for the mons and Weddle, 5; Evans
and Joy Long, 4; and Ains-
worth, 1. Altogether
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Adams, Patty. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 4, 1987, newspaper, February 4, 1987; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1255475/m1/1/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.