The Perkins Journal (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1915 Page: 6 of 6
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:
f HI P&kKIN S JOURNAL
C »rb:m paper]at£Journal o ffice
W Just say there is no other; it is
the flour for mother;—“PRIDE
OF PERRY.”
Baptist Church
Si'ibafli School, 10:00 a. m.
NO TRESPASSING signs
sale at Journal iftice.
A. M ' E. W. GOLDEN j
iV-Mi.lent, V. President
C. W. KENWORTHY. Cashier.
All business entrusted to
m will receive our prompt
attention..
Deposits guaranteed under
the depositors guaranty
fund
Morning service, 11:00 a. m.
R. Y. P. U. 6:30 p. m.
Evening service. 7:30.
Preaching second and fourth
Sundays.
J. M. Page, pascor-
If better flour could be made
than PRIDE OF PERRY, it’*
name would be PRIDE OF PER-
RY.
Chattle Mortgagee and notes,
•tame form as lifted by the banks,
in slock at the Journal office.
after him. responds to a very
high test of civilization. He feels
socially.
This can he applied to rubbish
that accumulates in front of your
store and residence. To remove
same means that you are the right
sort of a man. To let it remain
and be removed by another, is
just the opposite.
Many times an accident has
been prevented by the removal
of paper, boxes, and the like,
from public places. —Exchange.
Wc PAY 1HF freight
PAYNE COUNTY BANK
Congregational Church
Sahbatn School 10:00.
Morning send**'*, 11.00.
Evening service 7:30.
Prayer jneeting Thursday
vening 7:30.
James Davies, Pastor.
For Sale.
})r. R W. Holbrook geventh |)ay Adventist Church.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
*#■ Local Surneon for the ham a Ke H
H. Oiiice lu Central Drug Store.
Calls attended to day
or night.
DA. C. E. SEXTON
Sabbath school (Saturday) 10 a.m
Services followi ng 11a. m.
Prayer meeting Tuesday 7:30 p.m
Christian church.
Dificc and Consultation| Practice
Specialty of Diseases of Women
STILLWATER
OKLAHOMA
JOHN P. HICK AM
Sunday school, 10:00 a. m.
Preaching, 1 i :00 a. m.
Christian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m
Pe.■aching, 8:00 p. m.
Members and friends of the
■hii’ch are urged t> be present
t ell of (hese services.
J. C. Nininger, Pastor.
Hay Rake. Standard mowing
machine, six shovel cultivator..
Perry Cheatham.
Phone 67. Perkins.
Learrt White Y<»u Earn.”
Abraham Lincoln would split
rails all day in the forest and
• hen after his day's work was
finished, would walk five miles to
borrow a book to study and im-
prove himself. Ic is said of
George Washington that in ans-
wer to a question of his mother
as to why he studied so late at
night, replied that he was work
mg out tne destiny of his country.
There are hundreds of ycung
people today who are desirous of
i gaining a practical education,
^Jbut for one reason or another
^ f $ | they cannot leave home to secure
I Doll t Forget | , it, so they drag along from one
«} $ ivear to the next in
V'l'iin tii ui; /\» mi i nn.i 2. !
For Sale.
Sweet Potato plants 25 cents
a hundred. —Wagner’s Store.
•w
Methodist Church
Attorney-at-Law
In Moore Bldg.
STILLWATER,
OKLA
VanGrietliuyseu &. Lowe
Photographers
G1MABR9N GALLESY
ERKINS, - OKLAHOMA
Dr. J. M. Swallow
The Drugles ? Healer
Cures all kinds of diseases. We cure
where medicines fail. We remove the
cause and nature cures you, so whv
p rison your system will drugs. Call
at Dr. Proctor's office every Tuesday
Phone 121, Perkins.
There willlje the regular ser-
vices at our church with the ex-
ception of the in truing service
u.d that hour will be given at
the Lost Creek S. S. conven-
tion. The topic for the evening
lervice will he “Nets worth
nending.”# The service will be
worth your attending. Our
ilmrch is a home church. You’re
welcome.
| THE THEY O’ HEARN j
will he continue 1
at the
A [UDOME
Beginning
SATURDAY NIGHT
May 8th
I!
i
i
Two Kinds of Men.
Marvin Bell, Pastor.
Gospel Team
]Again We Say
Subscribe
for THIS
PAPERj
Without doubt our team enjoy-
11 the beet idav they have had
since the organization b?gan
work. Sunday was spent in Coy-
le with W. II. Chappell and the
good people of the community.
There were a number of conver-
-i ms and organizing a new Gos-
| pel team with great promise. We
were certainly treated royally
and everybody said come again.
Marvin Bell, Pres.
Civilized men makes roads;
the savage does not. That is the
safest test of civilization.
Among us. in all communities,
are individuals who are not really
civilized. They do not take any
interest in roads.
if
I
A man’s scale m civilization is
very correctly tested by his atti-
tude toward the stone which has
rolled into the road, or the tree
which has blown down across it.
The man who drives around the
obstacle day after day is one sort
of man, the one who stops his
team and rolls or drags it away
is another, And a person pas-
sing along a road which he does
not expect to retrace, who re.
moves the obstruction for the
sake of the stranger who comes
the same old
rut. There are hundreds of
> i others that are availing them
3 selves of the opportunity offeree
■J by the c->rruespondenc i dep-rt-
| ment of our college, saving their
4 ' leisure moments and investing
them in an education (hit wil
. {mean thousanus of dollars to
$ them in the coming years.
You may say that you are noi
able to take a course, but the
person who can least afford it is
the one who needs it most and
should have it by all means at any
sacrifice; it will not cost much.
Young friend, why not take
advantage of this opportunity
and gain a business education by
using your momeuts that would
otherwise be wasted? Why not
spend an hour of the loug eve
nings after night fall qualifying
yourself with a knowledge of the
famous Byrne Simplified Short-
hand, Practical Bookkeeping,
Typewriting, Arithmetic, Gram
mar, Writing and Spelling, fot
which the business world will
pay you cash?
Fill out the following blank
and mail to the correspondence
Department.
CAPITAL CITY BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
Your Name..........................
Address..................................
(Advertisement)
.mwiairr -nr- 'sxmnauucr «... :. «»»
Style—Always Right
duality—Always Guaranteed
Price—Always $17
We introduced to this town the special
suit of style that is approved, of quality that
is guaranteed, of price that never varies.
This suit is STYTEPLUS CLOTHES $17
One of the big makers several years ago
decided to see how big values he oould turn
out at a medium price by specializing thru
out his whole organization. $17 was the
price selected.
By centering their great buying power on
one class of woolens, by introducing scien-
tific methods in the making, they are able to
produce a highgrade, guaranteed fabric with
hand tailoring to ada to the shapliness and
the finish of the garment, and then to add
the skill of a recognized rfasnion artist, all
for $17.
Thus you know the style is right, you know
the quality is guaranteed and you know the
price is the same everywhere.
W e introduced this suit to this town. You
cannot buy it anywhere else. We have it in
all the new styles and fabrics. Come in and
see how easily and economically you can
d: ess well on the STYLEPLTJS basis.
BISHOP’S
STILLWATER
OKLAHOMA
CASTORIA
ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT.
AVege'aWe FVcparalion&rAs
slrailalii^i^fFootlaialRei'uta
ting (Ik Sioutadis and Bowels of
t Infants /Children
Promotes Diges(ionOiterf%
ness and Rest.Contains natter
Opiiim.Morphine nor Mineral.
Nor Narcotic.
For Infants and Chlldreu
The Kind Yon Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
jb+t»r<MJkSMXumm
Bmphin Sttdm.
JUStaaa*
MMhOBt-
jiiJseStri *
faasik*,.
Ifir/rt f>W-
Chi ificd Stsger •
m&yretiFknnr.
A perfect Remedy for CmstiBa-
tion, Sour StotnachDiarrtwin
Worms,Con vulsion^cvcrish
ness anil Loss of Sleep.
FacSi.mk Sijnafuie of
NEW YORK.
_wjAt6 jmonth? old, ;
^°N-35Ce*TSo
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
Jfjpt THAT’S THE WAY HORSE SHOE
y
BRAND PAINT IS MADE.
“ Up to a Standard; not down to a price.1
Yet because of its great covering capacity and
its extreme durability, Horse Shoe Brand
Paint is the first choice of those who spend
their money where it goes furthest.
Come in and let us show' you where you can
save money by buying Horse Shoe Brand
Paints and Varnishes.
LONG-BELL LUMBER 00
I • Don’t experiment on the Silo Question—settle it
right NOW with a KALAMAZOO.
TILE BLOCK OR YOUR CHOICE OF SEVEN
WOODS—all guaranteed to satisfy. The many exclu-
sive KALAMAZOO features—steady improvements for
IS years—put the KALAMAZOO SILO in a class by itself.
KALAMAZOO TILE BLOCK SILO
“The Permanent Profit-Producer for the Feeder"
The only silo with galvanized all-steel continous
opening door frame. This construction is fire-proof,
frost-proof, storm-proof, decay-proof, requires no paint,
no upkeep or repairs, no tighteaingor looseningof hoops.
First cost is only cost and a written guarantee goes with every silo.
Ask for illustrated free booklet describing this superior construction.
KALAMAZOO "SILO FILLERS
Famous Kalamazoo Center Shear Cut provides double capacity
------------------ ----------- kand
- wwsvuo V/VUVWI kJUOBi vuv |/AUVIUCS UUUUiO Ctt'
and requires less power. Costs less to operate, does better wor* «m
fills your silo an considerably less time than can other machines.
Malleable iron (unbreakable) knife wheel. Traveling steel feed-table,
and many other features obtainable only in the KALAMAZOtt. FUIs
the highest silos. Made in three sizes to fulfill the requirements of
the individual farmer, as well as the largest ranchman or dairyman.
Special Silo Filler catalog fully describes the superior merits of thla
machine. Write NOW for your copy of this booklet.
KALAMAZOO TANK
SILO COMPANY
*
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BMN VK/| IVHk
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The Perkins Journal (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1915, newspaper, May 7, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1137223/m1/6/: accessed November 18, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.