The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1969 Page: 1 of 6
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Services Held Favil R. Yeakley Is New Minister
For Paducah Church Of Christ
leynolds,
is Held
FLAVIL R. YEAKLEY
Hill County
Students will be given a series
of booklets that are geared to
their individual needs. They will
be allowed to advance at their
own rate under the supervision
The brown recluse spider
is of medium size and varies
from 3/10 to 1/2 inch in length.
Their coloring varies from an
orange-yellow to dark brown
or almost black and the body
July 30 in a Galveston, Tex.
hospital, and weighed six pounds
five ounces.
Dr. Long is doing his resid-
ency at John Hopkins Univer-
sity Hospital where he received
his medical degree.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. L. J. Elick of Arlington,
Tex. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Long
are paternal grandparents.
from
9 a. m. to 3 p. m. at the high
school.
Jordan lives in Fort Worth.
Her husband teaches junior high
industrial arts in the White
Settlement schools. They have
three sons, Paul, Sam and Tim.
ended
School
Britanica’s Programmed Math
called “TEMAC”.
of
as
I /
the
a
..
2
'GS.
n~-1
halk H.D. Club
Saturday,Aug. 9
Chalk H.D. Club picnic will
be Sat. Aug. 9, at the Chalk
Gin1,
Everyone is invited to come
and bring sandwiches and tea
for your family.
the ('
“* D. Short
LALS
2
2
2
lock
Reynolds, 80, died
services were in
apel, with the Rev.
ns, pastor of St.
Methodist Church
Beat Child; ess
The Paducah Womens Base-
ball team played Childress Fri-
day night, Aug. 1. Paducah won
24-10.
There will likely be two or
three more games before the
season ends.
The bite feels like a pin
prick. In some instances it may
not even be felt. Usually, a slight
local swelling and two red spots
with local redness indicate
where the bite occurred. It
becomes intense in 1 to 3 hours
and may continue up to 48
!eis this will be-
lar part of the
ogram. This is
i fOr cutting on
in Paducah. So residents in
this area are urged to be on
the lookout for these venom
Recluse spiders.
a
of Henderson High School and
plans to attend k Jacksonville
Baptist College in Jacksonville,
Texas.
Ted Johnson has been preach-
ing since he was 11 years old evening at 8
and has been used of the Lord through 17.
Game
will be dedicated to
1967
Missionary Baptist
Revival Set Aug 8-17
Members of the Missionary
Baptist Church and Pastor Dan j
Collom extends an invitation
to all who will come hear Ted '
Johnson, the powerful youth
evangelist, who preached a ten ;
day revival last year when there
was thirteen who came on pro-
fession of faith. J
W. B. Smith
Funeral services for Willis
B. Smith, 88, are pending at the
Bryan-Cothron Funeral Home
in Henderson. His death was
proceeded by a lengthy illness.
Smith died Saturday in
Richards Memorial Hospital.
Burial is to be in the Strown
Cemetery, Henderson. Norris
Funeral Home was in charge
of Paducah arrangements.
Smith, a retired farmer and
member of the Henderson
Church of Christ, was bom
July 2, 1881 in Hubbard and
lived in Henderson most of
his life until coming to Paducah
Francine Tippen,
Mrs.
be a
Laminack of Paducah and Mrs.
Margie Reynolds of Henderson;
six sons, Franklin, J. T. and
Curtis, all of Henderson, Willis
Elmer and Leroy, both of Kilgore and
Hershall of Tripoli, Libya; 43
grandchildren and 18 great-
grandchildren.
Laminack.
He is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Dixie Williams
of Childress, Mrs. Thelma
vas in the City of
Cemetery with
jraveside services,
ween a Lubbock
Ik 1957, having lived
■nd moving from
■at time.
pre his wife, Ora;
<s, Mrs. Jake P.
■drews and Mrs.
ch of Lubbock; three
•en and three great-
srs were Garnet
./Alfred P. Gouch,
ris, W. M. Lowery,
Stewart and L. W.
. » r. Ba
Students in the freshman
class can take Related Math-
remedial, Related Math, or Al-
gebra I according to their need
and ability. This can be given
at the same hour under the
direction of one teacher.
TEMAC is approved program of
The Texas Education Agency
at Austin.
Bill Daugherty, superintend-
sill
of
by
lcei96n\Ui &e
^as been
i General office
Eldredge was employed as
coach of the Guthrie CSD. He
is a native of McAdoo, Texas,
and has been
Loraine, Texas.
**** served in 1
The Guthrie High Schoolwill bedrooms and closets,
begin a new math program in
grades 7-8-9 the coming year.
They will be using Encyclopedia boards and door facings or J \
in cornersand crevices.
These spiders also can be found is clothed with short, slight
pubescence. Legs are long and
somewhat darker than the body,
being well covered with short
dark hairs. The most disting-
uishing characteristics are the
presence of three pairs of eyes
arranged in a semicircle on the
forepart of the head and a guitar
violin shaped marking immed-
iately behind the semicircle of
eyes with a distinct short
median groove forming the neck
of the guitar.
i .
Flavil R. Yeakley is the new
minister of the Church of Christ
here. He comes to Paducah from
Eastland church where he
served the past 18 months.
A graduate of Abilene
Christian College, Yeakley has
ministered in churches in the
Dallas and San Antonio areas
and other Texas and Oklahoma
cities in his 37 years of min-
istry.
Mett
M To
gelo
re Bennett
PPloyed
UOne Co. of
Pthe
Larry Mills and his first place gelding at District. He will
compete in the State 4-H Cutting Horse Contest at Sweetwater.
Guthrie School Faculty
Completed For 69-70
The Guthrie CSD has com-
pleted the faculty needs for the
1969-70 school year. Four new
members are inclued in the
faculty.
Mrs. Opal Rash will teach
first grade. She is a graduate
of Arlington College. Mr. and
Mrs. Rash reside at Guthrie,
Texas and we welcome them to
the community.
Mr. Ray Rice and family
reside north of Guthrie on the
Skeet Fulton Farm. Mr. Rice
will teach in a departmentalized
capacity in grades 3-4-5. Mr.
Rice is a graduate of Oklahoma
Christian College. He has been
teaching the past 5 years in
Alamogordo, New Mexico.
Mr. Jimmy Sandalin
Paducah was employed
science teacher in the Guthrie
now employ- High School. Mr. Sandalin and
----s family are residents of
Paducah. He is a graduate of
A Hine West Texas State at Canyon,
of Beauty We welcome Mr. Sandalin and
his family.
L members are
jl participate in
L Horse Contest
Lr to the State
L and Saturday.
L M. McCarroll,
[this will be the
cutting. Two go-
L heli on Wed“
k The top ten
[ finals go-round
i, the son of William
Leander and Julie Watson
Powers, was born March 29,
1882 in Comanche County. He
and Eather Reed in Sweetwater
and moved in a covered wagon
to Cottle in 1921 from Coke
County. The family lived in
Portales, N. M. for two years.
In failing health for four
years, he and Mrs. Powers had
been residents of the Golden
Age nursing home here the
past three years. He was a
member of the Baptist church.
Surviving are his wife, three
daughters, Mrs. Houston
(Jewell) Fields of Colton,Calif.
Mrs. Marshall (Mabie)Holcomb Turner of Hobbs, N. M., Mrs.
of Paducah and Mrs. Leonard
(Vera) Locke of Seattle, Wash.;
eight grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Pallbearers were
Clark, Jack Hamrick, Ned
Galloway, Johnny Hight, Claud
Bowling and Judge Roy Neal
Parks.
Paducah Women local Beauty In Miss Green Belt
Bowl Childress, August 15-16
Thirty one attractive Queen candidates are
nominees will compete for the nominated by Greenbelt Bowl
title of “Miss Greenbelt Bowl” Football players. The 1969
during the 20th annual Greenbelt nominees are Melissa Lindsay,
Bowl Football activities Aug. 15 Claudia Park, Debbie Wilhite,
and 16 in Childress. Deanna Allison and Orinda
Miss Jan Blain of Wellington,
1968 Queen, is to crown this
year’s queen at halftime of the
game Aug. 16.
Me
Lubbock.
All former residents are
invited to bring a basket lunch
and participate in the get-
together.
Mrs. Neiland Worley, leader of Girls Auxiliary of First
Baptist Church, went to Dunbar Center this week for re-
creation for the children summer school program. Re-
freshments of cookies made by the Girl’s Auxiliary and
ice cream were served. The girls made mid brought games
to the Center.
The Brown Recluse
Spider has been report-
ed from many southern
and mid-western states .
including Alabama, \
Mr. Cherry Eldredge, grad- Arkansas, Louisiana, '
uate of West Texas State, and Mississippi, Oklahoma,
family reside at Guthrie. Mr. Tennessee, Texas, Kan-
was employed as sas Missouri.
Members of this
species usually are found
coaching at in or near human habita-
tions. They can be ob-
bathrooms,1
, on
the underside of tables ,
and chairs, behind base-j
in cellars and garages which
are not cleaned often and the
contents are not disturbed for
relatively long periods.
The Brown Recluse or fiddler
of Mr. Jack Huey, Jr.,principal spider is a growing menace
and math teacher. the United States, it hides
in dark places and bites only
when disturbed but injects a
venom into its victim more
lethal than rattlesnake venom
or that of the Black Widow.
Keep a wary eye for this spider
Dark violin-shaped band on head
identifies a Recluse.
in many ways and places.
, The song service will be led
by Robert Backer and Randy
Collom both members of the
local church. Youth musicians
are Jerry Ballow and Beverly
Evans. Jerry is the daughter of
L. A. Ballow who is pastor of
First Baptist Church, McAdoo.
Beverly is the daughter of
Ted is a high school graduate Robert Evans, pastor First
Missionary Baptist Church,
Morton.
Come and receive the
blessings that God has for us
all. Worship services each
p.m. August 8
Mrs. Yeakley’s mother, Mrs.
W. G. Klingman, the minister
and his wife were assisted in
getting settled into their new
home by a son, Flavil Jr.,
minister of a Texas City Church
four years ago to make his home Christ, his wife and children,
with his daughter, Mrs. Lois Mark, Steve and Becky.
A daughter, Mrs. Richard R@UniOH J© B©
Aug-10, Lubbock
Mrs. Mattie Sparks, who
formerly taught at Delwin and
at Childress, has announced
the Hill County Reunion will
Another son, Ben Yeakley, Be held Sunday, August 10 at
is sales manager of Sheraton- Me Kenzie State Park in
Dallas Hotel. He and his wife
and daughter Tanya Lynn live
in Mesquite.
A Daughter
For Jack Longs
The arrival of Ann Merrick
Long is being announced by Dr. High School
and Mrs. Jack C. Long of
Baltimore, Md. She was bom StudsiltS To
Pre-Register
Have Daughter
A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Sossaman on
July 27 at 5:45 a. m. She
weighed six pounds, eleven
ounces and has been named
Monica Michelle. She has a
two year old brother, Shayne.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. T. H. Sossaman and
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Burns.
Final services were held
from Missionary Baptist
Church Monday morning at 10
a.m. for William Dean Powers, _ _
1 87, retired farmer and car- V*|T|||*r|f|y Lfll1
penter. He died Thursday after- UCllUI UCIJ I Ul
noon in Richard Memorial
■ Hospital where he had been
admitted the day before.
Rev. Dan Collom, pastor, o-
fficiated at the rites here and
at these at the graveside held
''UMM at 3 p Monday in the Reed-
J Powers Cemetery near Robert
Lee, Tex. in Coke County.
Powers, the son of William
ftes friends and
her at Eva’s,
/he daughter of
5‘ D. Short of
e £Cah resident,
r J andson of Mr.
[Sl; ^h°p. His
l Ue Bennett, be-
Orator here
ejisferred to
Is AnSelo.
lli 7* and three
ito’the^ °On and
^eir newhome
Plans were; developed Thurs-
day, July 31, for including Cottle
and King Counties as members
of the 20 county Red River Red
Cross Blood Program.
In Paducah for discussion
were Bill Jean, Red Cross re-
presentative from Amarillo;
General Lee, Amarillo, volun-
teer worker for the blood pro-
gram; and George Clevenger,
administrator of the Regional
Blood Program headquartered
at Wichita Falls.
Jean explained that
blood program maintains
rotating blood supply in each
of the 30 member hospitals
supplemented day or night
with special or emergency
blood deliveries.
Another benefit is the trans-
fer of blood for residents if
they need blood away from
home. Recently the Red Cross
Blood Center transferred 44
pints of blood to Lubbock
hospitals for Paducah
residents^
Each member county shares
in the operating cash of the
blood program, based in part,
on population.
Also each county arranges
to support bloodmobile visits
to collect the blood needed
to take care of the county’s
residents.
Clevenger said its annual
blood quota for Cottle - King
Counties is based oh 4% of
the total population. The annual
quota of 168 pints of blood can
be collected on 3 bloodmobile
visits a year, collecting 56
pints each visit.
Volunteers in Paducah and
the county will be needed to
help during these visits. Many
residents here are familiar with
the blood collectors procedure
from the recent bloodmobile
visit here.
Mrs. Neiland Worley heads
Mik© Sossaman S Red Cross Blood Program
for Cottle-King Counties as
chairman.
Members counties in the
region in Texas are Childress,
Foard, Hardeman, Knox, Baylor
Throckmorton, Wilbarger,
Wichita, Archer, Clay, Jack,
and Young.
In Oklahoma, counties include
Harmon, Jackson, Jefferson,
Cotton, Tillman, Murray and
Garvin.
Ki’S°n of Mr.
h iUf Croweu>
Weeks Dlil —
Mr, ent, had consultants from the
'• agency to visit the school. These
consultants feel that this will
benefit the students.
****
Registration for the 1969-70
school year for grades 9-12
will be at 3:00 P. M. Monday,
Aug. 18 at the principal’s office.
All high school students are
urged to register.
Registration for grades 1-5
will be at 9:00 AM on Aug.
19th at the Superintendents
office.
Ther e will be no junior high
registration except on the open-
ing day of school.
The Guthrie School will begin
on August 25 and will
classes the entire day.
| Watch Out For This Spiller Locally
y- : , hours. The symptoms
consist of abdominal pains
1 rise in blood pressure,
/ » nausea, profuse prespira-
. tion, leg cramps, tremors
loss of muscle tone and
vomiting. When the toxin
i reaches the respiratory
• cente r there is difficulty
' in breathing and prostra-
‘ tion.
< Frequent cleaning in
closets and cellars will
decrease the numbers of
■*? spiders in these areas.
; Where possible window
./-’shutters, step areas
and related places
‘ ' ^'should be washed
off with a hose. Some outbuild-
ing may be handled in the same
maimer.
Spray or dust outside the
home with lindane, dieldrin or
chlordane. Follow directions on
the manufacturer lables for
mixing sprays. Use a 0.2 per-
cent to 0.5 percent lindane,
0.5 percent dieldrin or 2 per-
Deanna Allison and
Eikman, all of Childress; Tene
Norris of Lamessa; Suzanne
Moore of Clarendon; Shelia
Gardenhire of Mamphis; Peggy
Robertson of Colorado City;
Pam Evans of Abilene; Sondra
Hopkins of Quanah; Kathy
Austin of Lubbock; Brenda
Jackson of Jacksboro; Jeanne
Johnel of Canadian. Others are
from Dallas, Shamrock, Ft.
Worth, Electra, Perryton,
Reed, Okla.; Crosbyton, Mata-
dor, Amarillo, Mobeetie, Mun-
According to Principal John
Brinson, high school students, ---------,-----
grades 9-12 will pre-register day, Ranger, Silverton, Holliday
August 18 through 22. and Wichita Falls.
Registration will be from Miss
daughter of Mr. and
G. R. Tippen, will
■ nominee in the contest.
The 1969 Greenbelt
program
the late Keitha Morris,
queen.
SIXTH ANNUAL
CHILDRESS 4-H
IUNIOR RODEO
The Sixth Annual Childress
4-H Junior Rodeo will be
staged at the Old Settlers
Arena in Childress Fair Park
on August 8 and 9.
Freddy Cordell, chairman of
the adult leader committee for
the 4-H Horse Club, will again
be arena director for the fast
moving show. AU boys and girls
18 years of age and under will
be competing for the 16 highly
prized sterling belt buckles to
be given the winners in each
event.
The events will include barrel
racing, poles, watermelon race,
bull riding, steer riding, bare-
backs, claf roping and calf
dobbing. All Round boy and girl
will be selected on a point
basis and will receive belt
buckles. Stock will be furnish-
ed b y Cliff Campbell and
cent chlordane household spray Freddy Cordell.
The Junior Show, one of the
■
5 COUNTY 4-H ENTER Cottle-King Included In 20 Counties Red
IE CUTTING CONTEST^.....River Red Crass Blood Program
4-H’ers enter
Contest Larry
iphrey’s,Jr.^d
^ill be accom-
Adult Leader,
t0 sweetwater
inside the home and spray a- The Junior Show, one of the
round windows, door facings largest in the entire area, is
and other places where spiders expected to draw some 200
are found. boys and girls from Texas and
Ten of these spiders were Oklahoma.
found in the cellar of Mrs. Entry blanks can be obtain-
Mai^ Renshaw, 1520 Willett, ed by writing Lowell C. Cure,
county agricultural agent, Box
350 Childress, Texas 79201 or
contact your local county agri-
cultural agent.
I
: Biss
HIf
■
■B
The Paducah Post
Years
PADUCAH, COTTLE COUNTY, TEXAS 79248 THURSDAY
AUGUST 7. 1969
NUMBER 21
THE PADUCAH POST
[D YEAR
Sixty -three
of Service
fving
Kins
Cottle
Counties
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The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1969, newspaper, August 7, 1969; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1281577/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.