,ncoe News
Mrs. Shermln Bower
WHILE CLUB
Worth While Club
6 in the home
Huff. The meeting
called to order by
Pearl Broyles and
meeting
nducted.
were Katie Price,
Nelson, Lucy Baker,
LOlinghouse, Ruth Knox,
Sawyer, Sepha Bar-
Pearl Broyles and the
were played and
were won by [.eta
anfl Mary Saw-
members present
a -well card for
Helen Marts and
Sawyer received birth-
October meeting will
in the home of Ruth
TRAVEL TOUR
Golda Kuhn just
from a "vacation"
a group of 43
a Travel Tour from
City. They first
ed in AIburquerque,
Mexico, then on to Las
For some reason
had more to say about
Las Vegas stay. They
the MGM Hotel and
Dean Martin's per-
They spent 3 days
touring the area, the city and
the Strip. They saw the
t¢lr. and Mrs. O. C.
Sawyer spent the week-end
with Mr. and Mrs. L. L.
Pyatt, Oklahoma City.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Blanchard were Tuesday
dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Redburn, Pawnee.
J. E. Mayfield was a
week-end visitor of Mr. and
beautiful ranch of Wayne Mrs. Andy Murphy and
Newton's and the lovely family.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
homes of Robert Goulet, Red
Foxx and Todie Fields. They
continued to Grand Canyon,
taking a 1% hour tram trip
around the rim, visited
Hoover Dam and on to
Tucumcari and Gallup, New
Mexico.
Returning to Oklahoma,
they toured tt3e Bee Farm at
Erick and found it most
interesting. The last night of
the trip Mrs. Kuhn spent in
the home of Blanche Kott in
Enid. Needless to say, she
reports a wonderful time.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Grote
visited with Mr. Grote's
sister, Mrs. Daisy Lynch,
Pawnee, Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lawyer and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Fisk, Rochester,
New York, spent the week
with Mr. and Mrs. L. E.
Clapp and Wilma. Mrs.
Lawyer and Mr. Fisk are
cousins of Mrs. Clapp. All
visited with Mrs. Fanny
Casey, Enid, Sunday. Mrs.
Casey is quite ill in the
hospital there.
Mrs. Eva Brown returned
home Tuesday from a
month's visit with her
sisters, Mrs. Lula Hart,
Colorado Springs, Colo., and
Mrs. Callie Wilson, Canon
City, Colo.
BEFORE
YOU BUY
CARPET
CHECK OUR:
• SELECTION
• QUALITY.
ANDPR00ES
Ins taHatn AvaHablo.
s,f?to00heson
HARRISON ELECTRIC
WITH FIXTURES AND COMPLETE
ELECTRIC SERVICE NOW
CARRIES ......
MINUTE MAN SMOKE
DETECTION
SYSTEMS
WITH EASY
INSTALLATION
FIND OUT MORE
Harrison Electric
LIGHT HOUSE
q14 S. Main, Stillwater
immmmm
Blanchard were Saturday
evening visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Flora, Still-
water.
Mrs. Andy Murphy and
Mrs. Leslie Garringer were
visitors of J. E. Mayfield,
Shawnee, Monday and Tues-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Knox
returned from several days
visit with their daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Treece, Wetumka.
Mr. and Mrs. Murle
Blanchard and children,
Morrison, were Sunday
evening visitors of their
parents Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett Blanchard and Mr.
and Mrs. Marion Clark.
Mrs. Ann Huff and Mrs.
Vergie Hodges were Monday
visitors in Stillwater.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Grote
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Shell were week-end visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Vance,
Gentry, Arkansas.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ander-
son, Wichita, Kansas, were
Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Anderson's grand-
mother, Mrs. Katie TuCker.
Mrs. Anderson is the former
Rhonda Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Wallace, Stillwater, were
Sunday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Clapp
and Wilton. Mr. Wallace is a
nephew of Mrs. Clapp.
Mrs. Gene Cockriel and
Brian, Ponca City, visited
Saturday with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Knox.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Grote
and Mr. and Mrs. Vic
Piotrowski visited their
niece, Kimberly Huff and
other Glencoeites in the
Stillwater Hospital Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Meryl Porter
were Sunday dinner guests
of their daughter and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shamel,
Tulsa. All the Shamel
children were there: Mr. and
Mrs. Eddie Kimble and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Vic
Sharpton and family, and
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Fisher
and family, all of Tulsa. They
report a lovely time.
Mrs. Edith Rains and Mrs.
Laura robinson were Still-
water visitors Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Treat
spend Sunday in Ponca City
assisting their daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Budzene, in their
move to a new home in
Perkins.
Mrs. Esther Smith, Perry,
visited Wednesday with her
sister Mrs. Laura Robinson.
In the afternoon the ladies
visited their aunt Mrs. Abby
Doty near Ripley.
Illness
Glencoeites hospitalized in
the Stillwater Hospital are
Mrs. Clyde Huff, Tom
Brown, Kimberly Huff and
Scott Harting. Best wishes to
all.
Mrs. Charley Murphy,
who has been a surgical
patient in the Stillwater
Hospital, is presently conval-
escing at home.
GLENCOE PUBLIC
SCHOOL LUNCH MENU
THURSDAY
September 22
Chicken Enchilada
Green Salad
Buttered Corn
Peanut Butter Strip
Peach Halves
Milk
FRIDAY
September 23
Hamburger on Bun
Onion, Pickles, Mustard
Oven- Browned Potatoes
Carrot Sticks
Pineapple Upsidedown Cake
Milk
Goldie Brown
Services for Goldie Inez
Brown were held at 10:00
a.m. in the Yale Funeral
Home Memorial Chapel
September 17, 1977. She
died Monday, September 12,
1977 at Stillwater Municipal
Hospital.
The Rev. F. E. Westburg
of the United Pentecostal
Church in Cushing offici-
ated. Burial was in Lawson
Cemetery.
She was born Dec. 28,
1924 at Sapulpa, the
daughter of Bert and Maggie
Woods. She was married
September 1, 1940 to Lloyd
Brown at Pineville, Mo. She
was a longtime resident of
Payne and Creek counties,
returning to Yale from
California in 1968. They
moved to Stillwater in 1976
because of her illness.
Survivors include her
husband, her mother, Mrs.
Maggie Woods of Perkins,
two daughters, Neveta J.
Steadman of Riverside,
Calif., and Mrs. Sammie J.
Elliott of Yale, two sisters,
Mrs. Marie Hamilton, Lava
Hot Springs, Idaho, and
Mrs. June Hunter of
Perkins, a brother, Carl
Woods of Stillwater and five
grandchildren.
-0"
PUBLIC SERVICE
ANNOUNCEMENT
The Payne/Noble C.A.F.,
Inc. Head Start Child
attendance without regard to
race, color, or national
origin.
The Perkins Journal Thursday, September 22, 1977.7
tion from college, been with
From Here and There ,,o Wildlife conservation
and Environmental service.
Will Brock, not quite 10
months of age, is royally
By Edna Eaton Wilson harvest is now; accordingly Labor Day weekend, entertaining his grand-
Grandson and I go often to Dr. Wilson has been parents, both the Brooks and
the roadsides where the appointed Medical Director the Shells.
grapes are. Curtis climbs the for the State of Kansas, and Will is beginning to talk,
Fire, ignited bya bolt of trees and throws down laden he and Mrs. Wilson have and to take a few steps
lightning Friday morning, branches, which I catch and moved there, unaided, but when he gets in
September 16 destroyed the fill boxes with the clusters. All five of the sons are ahurry its down on all fours
home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Nothing quite so delicious working or are in college, and scat! and Scoot!
Mathesoninoldlngalls. on pancakes or waffles as Robert, the eldest is ....
Neighbors heard the bolt, wild grape syrup. Nothing employed in Washington, News from the Payne
saw the fire and called the better on hot biscuits than D.C. David works and County fair is always
StiUwater Fire Department wild grape jelly, attends college at Washing- heartening, but especially
immediately. Two fire trucks There is an idea that one ton State University. Charles rewarding this year is the
were rushed to the scene, can extract the juice from in college at Manhattan. news of the winnings of the
but the house was gone wild grapes with little labor George is attending Kansas East Side 4-H group that
before the trucks could get to by simply washing the U at Lawrence; Bill had numbers about 19members
tngalls. In fact, the fire was clusters and boiling the decided to get work and live and includes for the first
"instant and neighbors could clusters. Mother taught me inTopeka, taking a rest from time, a number of the
not enter the house to that wild grape clusters college forasemester, handicapped from the Shel-
salvage even one bit of the should indeed be washed, ---- tared Workshop.
furnishings. Both Mr. and and then the grape berries Young Will Brock, son of East Side 4-H was
Mrs. Matheson had left for should be carefully picked Mr. and Mrs. John Brock is organized two years ago by
work before the lightning from the clusters, visiting the Brock and the Linda Schelby. It was Linda
struck "You can't make jell from Kenneth Shell families while who sought and finally
.... wood," Mother would tell his parents are moving from received authorized permis-
Diamond Valley Women's us. Mother was right. Sherman, Texas to Monroe, sion to include the handi-
Club met Saturday night in .... La. capped. These handicapped
regular meeting session. The Dr. and Mrs. James The move came as a result are among those who are
women tied a new pieced Wilson and son Bill of of a promotion, and added adult in age, but because of
comforter destined for the Topeka, Kansas visited responsibility far John Brock various causes are and will
Matheson family who had relatives hereabout over who has, since his gradua- always besub-teen.
the misfortune to lose their
home by fire just the day
before the club met. j,w,,, ' m
Heard a bit of interesting 0 :
news today. Seems the
article 'Roan Tuits' can be •
purchased. A disc of plastic
or maybe of wood with the NOIF SHOIFING
caption 'Roun Touit' printed
onitsface. Onestorehadthe Fall & F/inter Merchandise
encouraging advice on a
placard of the bin of 'Roun
Tuits': Buy one of these and Children's Fall & Winter Colors
do all those tasks you'd Denim Jackets Ladies Double Knit
planned to do when you got
one." ---. ....... Pants s 8
Lucky you when somebody X- ,, .......
gives you a 'Roan .... Tuit.' t, reat Sweaters Selection of Fall
Sister sent us a freshly with hoods Children's Clothes
baked loaf of whole wheat .......... -" .........
bread, the starter for a good Ladies Ladies Ski New Lingerie
meal. Grandson Curtis, Long and Short Jackets
watching the chicken going ..... -.-..-.
into the fryer, sagely C '
observed, "Man does not oats .................
livebybreadalone, sohehas Vi la's Bo tiq
• ,,, o u ue
to have fried chicken.
The fox grapes are HOURS: 9:30A,M. toS:30p.m. "Look for the Red Sign" -547.2862-
plentiful, purple and full of Monday thru Saturday
juice. The time for the grape 5½ blocks East of Main 603E. Kirk Perkins, Oklahoma
[ i in I n I Ill, I I I I It I
CUSTOffRS OF
OKLAHO51A NA'llJRAL
GET IIKHE GAS
Stillwater, Cushing, Yale,
Glencoe, Perkins and Perry
and the Neighborhood Nurs-
ery in Stillwater announces
that the same meals are i THBR DOLLAR!
available to all children in
mmmmmmm
Panama Canal
COMPLETED IN 1914 ACROSS THE ISTHMUS
OF PANAMA, IT COST OVER f365 MILLION!
IT TAKES A SHIP 7 TO II HOURS TO TRAVEL
THE &MILE CANAL THROUGH SiX PAIRS
OF LOCKS AND AN ARTIFICIAL LAKE.
iFTtEY E.VER lOSE
THE K 11o
,WERE t
Your valuables are
always protected in
a locked safety
deposit box.
"1
i
I
I
I
I
m
m
m
m
m
Even though the cost of natural gas has risen in recent months, rates charged
customers of ONG still remain among the lowest in the nation.
Oklahoma Natural continues to add reserves, and through aggressive buying,
obtains this new gas at the lowest possible cost.
We encourage everyone to conserve natural gas and all forms of energy. Wise use
of today's energy is the best assurance of dependable supplies tomorrow.
Costs shown are for 10,000 cubic feet of gas at residential rates as of July 1, 1977.
Cost-of-gas or field-price adjustments are included, and sales taxes excluded.
",'USTIN, TX
|l i
BALTIMORE, MD
PHILADELPHIA, PA
HOUSTON, TX
SAN ANTONIO, TX
MILWAUKEE, Wl
WASHINGTON, DC
CHICAGO, IL
NEW ORLEANS, LA
FORT WORTH, TX
ST. LOUIS, MO
CLEVELAND, OH
003!.72J
30.381
28.87 I
26.78 )
28'31[I
26.08
25.85 [
25.01 I
24.88 I
24.53 l
24.06 I
22.72] '
ml00!/lember FDIC Perkmns, OK. l
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
DALLAS, TX
22.371
DETROIT, MI
EL PASO, TX
i
TULSA AND OKLAHOMA CITY*
21.77]
20.84 i
20.0sJ
LOS ANGELES, CA
i
17.491
"ONG Seni
iiiiiii iiiiiiii
ii ii i iiiii
Work with us-conserve energy now.
Not paid for by mtyert
I II I I IIIIII II I