The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 24, 1970 Page: 3 of 8
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SEPTEMBER 24. 1970
B i
at the home of Eloye ’
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SALT CREEK CLUB
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XRfATIVE COLOR
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WHITES AUTO
BiKiea
912-9th STREET
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KSEJtTBOSE
Now you can save $5.00
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earthenware
Chevrolet
Fail Sale
_____________
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discussion on
“Civil
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Members
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CLINT
EASTWOOD
gram to this area.
The program will focus on
Hillis of Quanah and Barbara
Holeman of Childress.
Announcement of the Quanah
meeting is being made at all
home demonstration and 4-H
Miss Haggard said anyone
wishing to attend the Pork-A-
Rama is urged to contact her
at her office on the second floor
of Cottle County courthouse or
or postoffice box 298, Paducah.
club meeting and folders an-
nouncing the event are being
distributed throughout Paducah.
TEXAS
PRISON
Also on Sale
4 pc. place settings
$4.49 open stock $8.25
Madeira, Pebble Beach
and Nut Tree
now $4.99 open stock $940
• NO PILOT
• NO FLUE
• FITS ANYWHERE
• CLEAN, ODORLESS
•QUICK RECOVERY
• 10 YEAR GUARANTEE
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Eastwood
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KILLINGSWORTH’S
•40 YEARS YOUR JEWELER*’
Fpjamitli
ElECTRIC
water
heater
F
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IG
PH0|(E
PLUMBING
702- 9th Street
Phone 492-3720
fr&nciscdjf <
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FREE WIRING
Normal 220 volt wiring to WTU
residential customers who buy an
electric 40 gallon or.larger water
heater from a local dealer or WTU.
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THE PADUCAH POST
Two who have been guests in
| M the Ralph Hardin home for
Wipseveral days, who returned last
Wednesday to their homes, were
their daughter, Mrs.F.C.Smith
of Fort Worth; and Mrs.
Hardin’s brother, John Cran-
ford of Alliance, Neb.
We mean by putting you first? September 29 at your
an
)ub^
BLANCHE GROVES
native of Bridgeport, Tex. She
attended Decatur Baptist Col-
lege and received the bachelor
of arts degree from Baylor Uni-
versity in Waco and the master
of religious education degree
from Southwestern Baptist
Thelogical Seminary in Fort
Worth. She taught school in
Texas and Oklahoma before
going to the Orient.
Following mission appoint-
ment for China in 1920, Miss
Groves taught in two schools
in Soochow. She was interned
by the Japanese early in World
War n but was repatriated in
a short time.
Returning to Soochow after
the war, she served as pastor
sentative from Dallas and Frank
Brooks, meat specialist from
Austin, will present the pro-
gram to which many adults and
young people are expected.
County home demonstration
agents assisting, in addition to
Miss Haggard, include Sharon
were
Melba
Virgil
Doris
Staggs, Carlene Colwell, Fred-
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i Palace Theatre i
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9
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"TWO MULES
FOR
SISTER SARA”
GP All Ages Admitted!
GET PICTURES MADE OF GRANDPA,
GRANDMA, DAD, MOM AND ALL THE
[ LITTLE ONES AT THESE SAME LOW PRICES!
SHUGART
CttlOR
PHOTOS
and recipes for pork and door
prizes of pork products will be
given at the Quanah meeting.
Miss Judy Gosnell, Texas
Agricultural Products TAP re-
__ _ presentative from Paducah,
in 1950 she transferred to Hong Doris Greenhaw, TAPjrepre-
Kong where she did evangelistic r-r2—*
work in the North Point section
until her retirement.
Following the benediction a
salad luncheon will be served.
A nursery for small children
will be provided.
save $5.00 on
16 piece starter sets
$16.95 RegtHarEy $21.95
A->p!e and Ivy
Also on Sale
Madeira, Pebble Beedi
& Nut Tree
Reg. $23.95—now $18.95
$
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^nientd
0 So W
DTT<U Ofhj,
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the Delwin Home Demonstration flE
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i* oct. 4 -ConwayTwitty
*©er. 11-Willie Nelson
AOCT.IB-Jerry Lee Lewis
^oetas-Faron Young
2 RM. HUNTSVILLE — -
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parton i
Races’
in October
Hl
Chevrolet dealer’s.
T * VMWzto- mark of excellence
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CHERYL ANN GOODWIN
ENGAGED—Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Goodwin of Paducah an-
nounce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Cheryl Ann, to Charles William Mitchell, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mitchell of Olney. Miss Goodwin
and her fiance are seniors at North Texas State University
in Denton where he is vice president of Alpha Phi Omega,
men’s national service fraternity. Miss Goodwin is a graduate
of Paducah High School. The couple will be married Satur-
day, Oct. 24, in the First United Methodist Church in Paducah.
Missionary Speaker
For WMU Meeting
Speaker for the Seventh An-
nual Red Fork Associational
Women’s Missionary Union
meeting at the First Baptist
Church in Crowell Thursday,
Oct. 1, will be Miss Blanche
Groves, Southern Baptist Mis-
sionary for 39 years before
her retirement in 1959.
Theme of the association pro-
gram will be “For the Living of
These Days” and Mrs. E.H.
Stogsdill, director of Vernon,
will preside.
Mrs. Joe Allen and accom-
panist, Mrs. Richard Rancher
of Childress will lead the music
and Mrs. Overton Neal of
Quanah will bring the Call to
Prayer.
Reports will be given and of-
ficers elected for the coming
year.
Rev. John Gillispie, First
Baptist Church, Crowell,
moderator of Red Fork General
Baptist Association, will report
on plans for 1970-71.
Miss Groves will deliver her
message at 11 a.m., speaking
on her work with the Chinese
people.
Miss Groves has just return-
ed from a summer visit to Hong
Kong where she renewed ac-
qusintances and visited old
friends.
Serving in China, Hawaii and
Hong Kong, Miss Groves is a
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______ " Ion 16 pc. Starter Sets and as much as $3.75ea4-piece place
settings during Franciscan's once-a-year Fall Sale. California-designed and made
Franciscan Earthenware is chip resistant, color-fast and will never craze. R k absolutely
safe in your oven and dishwasher. ALL patterns offer you a wide dxsce of multi-use
accessories. A place setting includes one dinner plate, bread and butter plate, cup
and saucer; a starter set includes four each of these items. Come in now... sale ends
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1 SUNDAY ONLY - Sept. 27th |
Michael Crawford
Ryan O’Neal
The Games
The Texas Safety Association
reminds motorists that changes
in Texas traffic laws now re-
quire the driver approaching a
paved street or highway from
an unpaved roadway to yield
the right of way.
csNm ehm shS SSr ’
Caprice. There’s a double layer of steel in the roof, a steel guard beam in each door, power disc brakes up
™’ a new power Nation system inside, a wheelbase two and one-half °Xthe°kind of J
““Mort of a six- or seven-thousand-dollar car, but at Chevrolet pnces. And that s the kind of change
these tight-money times that all of us can appreciate.
VHO ^9S°'
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Eloye
Fredda
rvuuS«iO, , Carlene
Colwell, secretary; Rita June
Seigler, assistant secretary;
Doris Staggs, reporter and
Virgil Neskorik, recreation.
Roll call was answered with
1_„ :n the subject:
Defense Preparations
Made for My Family.**
present
Mmes. Mary Thaxton,
Owens, Peggy Carr,
Neskorik, Betty Carr,
da Rodgers, Oleta Gibbs, Leia
Mae Brady, Bureda Owens,
Maurice Davis, Marion Wofford
and a new member, Sherry
Owens.
The hostess’s gift was re-
ceived by Melba Owens.
| Home
IDemo nstration I
LCjub NewsJ
DELWIN CLUB
New officers were elected by j
• •••••■’ ’
Ve?n. Not just another little car, but one little car that does everything well. You get more room, more
* and more power than most little cars give you, yet the gas mileage is right m the same neighborhood
llh the best of them. Vegas come dressed up, too. not stripped to the bone so you have to add a lot to make
lenr liveable. Drive one. You’ll see. ........
Club which met Wednesday,
Sept. 9
Shavor.
The slate includes
Shavor, president;
Rodgers, treasurer;
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Salt Creek Home Demonstra-
tion Club met Thursday, Sept.
17 in the home of Mrs. Freddie
Russell.
After the devotional was
read, roll call was answered
with *My favorite minute
meal.”
Officers elected for the
coming year were: Velma Lee
Worley, president; Freddie
Russell, vice president;
Frankie Gilbreath, treasurer
and secretary; Grethel Wood,
council delegate; Lois Liedtke,
recreation chairman.
Miss Marilyn Haggard, new
agent, was program leader.She
had prepared some appetizing
dishes demonstrating Meals In
A Minute.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses to: Marilyn Hag-
gard, Frankie Gilbreath,
Bobbye Gilbert, Violet Gann,
Trethel Wood, Lois Liedtke and
visitor, Mrs. Alfred Allen.
Next meeting will be with
Mrs. Violet Gann on Oct. 22.
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! *v»nishin7 tailZZr?big change in our big wagon. The window goes up into the roof, the GKde-
tai'gate vanishes beneath the floor. Out of sight. Out of your way for easy loadmg even in a closed
F e Or when you have a trailer hooked on.
PARTICIA DORICE MAYBERRY
TO BE MARRIED—The engagement of Miss PatriciaDorice
Mayberry of Paducah and Sgt. Jan Milo Hoskins of Barksdale
Air Force Base, La., has been announced by her parents,
Mrs. Jack Nelson, Paris, Tex., and Horace Lee Mayberry
of Paducah. A March wedding is planned by the couple. Miss
Mayberry is a 1970 graduate of Paducah High School. Sgt.
Hoskins, son of Mr. and Mrs. FredHoskins, Keithsburg, Ill.,
is a 1965 graduate of Westmier High School. He will be
stationed at Barksdale in Shreveport, La., until his discharge
from the Air Force in February.
Pork-A-Rama Scheduled Oct. 1
Cottle andKingHome Demon-
stration Clubs and 4-H mem-
bers are being urged to parti-
cipate in the Port-A-Rama
scheduled for the Quanah School
cafeteria Thursday, Oct. 1, at
7:30 p.m.
Miss Marilyn Haggard, Cot-
tle-King home demonstration
agent, said this is one of the
most important meetings sche-
duled for the fall and added
that later this fall Paducah is
expected to host its own Port-
A-Rama for this immediate
area.
The special program is being
presented through the efforts of
the Texas Department of Agri-
culture and the Texas Agricul-
tural Extension Service and
county home demonstration
agents from Childress, F oard,
Hardeman, Cottle and King are
of a church and supervised a cooperating to present the pro-
good will center, nutrition cen-
ters and a hostel. She left China
in 1950, when the Soochow area the cuts, storage, preparation
came under Communist control.
In 1953 the Texas missionary
went to Honolulu where she
taught in a Hawiian Baptist
Academy and worked with
Waialae Baptist Church. Then
Wichita Falls Art
Tea Show Set Oct. 10
The Wichita Falls Art Asso-
ciation of the Women’s Forum
invites all area artists to par-
ticipate in its 23rd Annual Side-
walk Art Show on Saturday, Oct.
10, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Any artist over 17 years of
age may enter any number of
framed picture or pieces of
crafts.
Registration for the show will
be in Parker Square Shopping
Center at the following locat-
ions: McClurkan’s Department
Store, Austin Shoe Store, and
arp’W,ftiaS JU^V r Wood’s Shoe Store. Registra-
io.,v \Va5hin&ton» DoC’’ tion table will be open at 9 a.m.
KePub^canCarn" 311 the show ends at 3 p.m.
Since this is a sale show,
^rS Jr.of Pa(^l1” there will be a 10 percent
‘of Cott e service charge on all paintings
of r? Association, an(J crafts that have been sold.
^dents of this area, please money to
Chilc^eSS fe 6| one of tt16 registration tables.
SEPTEMBER 28th
19^
Invited
County
ti C° a to attend
e»’1 Childress
>> club'
»pt. 30. at
Toe Staley,
h '^S\ Z candi-
’,P™n8ressional
*Crolin Tower,
'' ^’senator, will
both from
^’tourlnsMs
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197LYouVe changed
VVeve changed
x' Worth seeing. Worth owning.
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The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 24, 1970, newspaper, September 24, 1970; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1281545/m1/3/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.