THE PERKINS JOURNAL
PAGE NII'E
[TION of "THE PAYNE COUNTY BANK" of
the State of OKLAHOMA at the close of business
, 1967.
ASSETS
With other banks, and cash
o£ collection
obligations,
trantecd
States and political subdivisions
eral agencies and corporations
U.S•
and disconnt:
ASSETs
Dollars
467,527.58
1,077,660.64
622,135.98
30,000.00
1,556749.68
3,754,073.88
LIABILITIES
of individuals, partnerships,
deposits of individuals,
corporations
:ed States Government
s and political subdivisions
checks, etc.
$3,395,959.90
demand deposits $1,523,271•38
time and savings deposits $1,872,688.52
t'ItLIT IE S
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
par value
authorized 1,000
outstanding 1,000
rofits
ACCOUNTS
' LtIILITIES'" AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1,342,949.72
1,815,235.29
1,335.57
214,390.81
22,048.51
3,395,959.90
1O0,000.00
100,000.00
158,113.98
358,113.98
3,754073.88
MEMORANDA
for the 15 calendar
call date 3,407,035.88
for the 15 calendar days
II date 1,544,171.34
HOLSINGER, CASHIER, of the above-named
(SWEAR AFFIRM) that this report of condi-
to the bet of my knowledge and belief.
t-Attest: GALEN C. HOLSINGER
D.C. BUTLER
NINA WILHITE
LEON C. FREED
GALEN C. HOLSINGER
DAVID B. ROSS
Directors.
Oklahoma, County of Payne, ss:
to and subscribed before me this 28th day of
and I hereby certify that I am not an officer
of this bank.
expires Feb. 10th, 1968
LENORA E. WEST, Notary Public.
i
"v, my THE OLD TIMER
I From Roger Hackett,
Raleigh, N.C.: I remember a
pre-teen play-boyhood on the
streets of a middle class section
in a middle-sized mid-west city
(Evansville, Ind.), in the early
years of the century. The streets
were our principal play areas,
a'tong with the sidewalks and
backyards, and a few not-so:
near vacant lots, since the city
had no public recreation areas
of any kind then. And the streets
Were relatively safe, since traffic
Was light and probably 75-90
per :cent horse drawn, including
the fire fighting equipment,
- Scrub" softball was our
principal street game (only we
called it "indoor" ball, from tie
origin of thegameing mnasia).
Other street and neighborhood
games :and recreations included
shinny, runheepie-run, kick.
k, tree climbing, mum.
blew peg, marbles, hoop rolling,
tag, follow the leader, hide-and-
go-seek, duck-on-the-rock.
fteze¢ and "Whatcha doing i,l
my viard? Winter acfivitie
included snowball fights and
sled riding behind wagons, es,
lial! the neighborhood gro.
cery d-ivery vans (they wew
faster than the heav: coal
wagons,, fo instance), and oq
tlomly gum. The techniqu
wastkmp end of a longisl
sled rpomr the rear axle c
the chosen vehicle and then
holding the end of the rope, t
• seetolleself on,the sMd and g:
for a ride, sometimes for a mib
or more. Both boys and gir'•:
took part In this activity. An;
several of the warm weathe
games mentioned above wcr,
also ':co-educational."
Ofiy rarely did a driver ob
Jec to pulling his youthful fred
ridcz., ho sometimes |mtn
be'ed ag nu a a dozen. An,:,
fokl,.rr,g a heavy snowfall, sle
riding behiad vehicles might b,
c!¢mc for two weeks or }re)re,
iae tl=,'.' city made no attempt
to clear rite residential streets.
(Se,ld €nlr;u|io."ll to this colurnn te e Old
m,,.. t 639, Pro.frt, ge,tucry 4060?.)
Continued from CHURCH PAGE
in out. affluence and prosperity•
"For what will it profit a man,
if he gains the whole world and
l'orfeits his life?"
Thus, as "owners" of three-
quarters of our land, we are
stewards or administrators for
a few short years of the Lord's
good earth! It is His earth plac-
ed in trust in our hands. This
is equally true of time: it is
God's time, given to man to use
creatively, and we are respons-
ible to God, as "tenants" for
how we use our given allotment
of time, and also how we have
used His land and natural re-
sources. This is what we mean
by Christian stewardship, when
', t BY HELEN HALE
BeRet Baking Tip6 ''
If only one shelf is needed In
the oven while baking cookies,
remove the second shelf and use
it as a cooling rack for baked
cookies.
Should a recipe call for
chocolate and you're out, substi-
tute 4 tablespoons cocoa and
1/2 teaspoon butter for each
ounce of chocolate.
Colored icing will fancy
cookies quicldy-if you swirl it
on with a brand new flat brush
that's about an inch indiameter.
Once it's wasb_Ji, such a brush
is ideal for spreading harbei:ue
sauce on foods that are broiled
indoors or out.
Pouc water into muffin fins
which aren't filled with batter.
This helps avoid damage to
metal caused by heat.
Cookie dough too soft [o
handle? Let it chill in the refrig-
erator until firm. Work quickly
when using chilled dough and
refrigerate remainder for next
cookie sheet.
Coat scissors in flour mixJ
lure (of quick breads, cookies
or cakes) before cutting dates
or raisins. It prevents the dried
fruit from sticking to the
scissors.
we recognize that all things be-
long to God, and we are part-
ners with God.
The parable of the talents
(Matt. 25:14f) makes one thing
quite clear. A "talent" (whether
of ability, time, property or
money) is like any coin, it has
two sides. On one side is written
"endowment," and on the other
"responsibility." To the measure
in which a man or nation is
gifted, to that same measure he
is accountable! Therefore when-
ever we are handling God's real-
estate, we are responsible to
God the "landlord," and to the
common welfare of our family,
community, nation and world
community, for the conservation
under God of the land and nat-
ural resources God has so richly
endowed the human family.
"This land is our land," yes,
but only because God has given
it to us, not for exploitation, not
for selfishness and greed, but for
private and public welfare and
recreational enjoyment. We are
held accountable and res'pons-
ibte to God who is the landlord
of all life! And when He comes,
what will He say to you'? "You
fool! You wicked and slothful
servant! This night your soul is
required of you!" Or, "Well
done, good and faithful servant;
you have been faithful over* a
little, I will set you over much;
enter into the joy of your mas-
ter." (Mt. 25:21)
I II 1
THE LEE CO.
*PLATE GLASS
*WINDOW GLASS
*MIRItOWS
*SHOWER DOORS
We Install
Store Fronts
PICTURE FR#MilNC,
AlL Kinds Of Paint
1001 S. MAIN
STILLWkTER FR2-3242
I I I I
• J,ckson's
Wafers
3 for
$L
Ih-TO00ns
keCream
½ gaL
79¢
Or
/ lb jar
e
4 lb jar
Crust
Flour
5 lb
Duck
Jmce,
eaa 3 for
Red Bud
Shortening
3 lb can
63c
I I
Wilson's All meat
lb
II II I I
New Crop
Strawberries
1 lb. pkg.
2 for
79c
French Fries
2 lb. bag
3 for
89c
II I
*.d Potatoes
20 lbs.
I III
ICucumbers
31bs.
I II I
Fryers
$1.19
I I
lb 15e00i
IIII N , , ,, I
2 lbs.
I
Freslt
Ear
6 ears
for
25€
Corn
I IIII
29€
oi. Discount given on each
-/O Cash Register Recespt
Keys Made While You Watch
We Carry a Comolete Line of Veterinary Supplies
Prices effective Thurs., Fri., and Sat., May 4.5 and 6, 1967
0F
GRADUATION
MOTH0000DAY
Father's Day
CARDS
Zestee
Salad Dressing
te
37c
box
23c
Oxydol
King Size
20c off label
$1.14
Personna Stainless
Steel
Blades
reg. 79c
Bake
Bread,
5 for
$1