The Wynnewood Gazette (Wynnewood, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1995 Page: 4 of 8
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Page 4, The Wynnewood Gazette, Thursday, June 8, 1995
Rambling Tho
fF
V
By Yolande Josephson
By Florida Nation
S
Amy Harris and Brett Jameson
Harris and Jameson
plan July wedding
I
She could work "out" - picking the the machine, go off to other things
Rural business
seminar is set
A
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2
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• Vinyl Siding
• Break the Never-ending Painting Cycle
• Remodeling • 50 Year Warranty
J
ANE
Steve’s Self Service
Dixon Variety Store
Robberson Clinic
4
State Bank of
Wynnewood
Crescent Drug
Martin's Fertilizer
*1512
1202.0
The First Heritage
National Bank
GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE
10:00 - Sunday Worship
7:30 - Evening Worship
MT. OUVE BAPTIST
Rev. Terrall Rushing
9:45 - Sunday School
11:00 - Sunday Worship
6:00 - Training Union
7:00 - Evening Worship
clothes up at the homes of her
customers and taking them home to
do, often with her own laundry at
the same time. Then she could
press the garments and linens the
next day.
Tuesday, naturally, was ironing
day. Leave us not forget that all
How to successfully run a rural
business amid federal rules and
regulations is the subject of an
evening community education
seminar set for Friday, June 9, in
Duncan.
ELMORE CITY
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST
Elder Bill Huckbay. Pastor
2nd A 4th Sunday of Each Month
10:30-12:00 - Worship Services
LIVING WORD
PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH OF GOD
Rev. Don Russell, Pastor
HWY 29-E of Elmore Qty
10:00 - Sunday Services
11:00 - Sunday Worship
630- Evening Worship
Wednesday
730-Services
Gladys and Don McCollum of
Davis and Richard and Terry
Pinnon of Wynnewood are happy
to announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of Sharyne
Annette Glover and Kevin Richard
Pinnon.
Sharyne attended Davis schools
and is employed at Cover Craft
Industries in Pauls Valley. She is
the daughter of the late Clarence
Glover.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Rev. Tim McGough
9:45 - Sunday School
11:00 - Sunday Worship
7:00 - Evening Services
Wednesday
730 - Evening Services
For further information call 354-
8099 or 1-800-248-5465
t
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I
CHURCH OF CHRIST
HWY 29
9:45 - Sunday School
10:40 - Sunday Worship
6:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:00- Worship
enryman m
*1420 22ti.
UNITED PENTECOSTAL
HOLINESS
Ronald McLaughlin, Pastor
10:00 - Sunday School
7:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7.00 - Bible Study
UNITED PENTECOSTAL
Mike Boswell, Pastor
10:00 - Sunday Services
6:00 - Sunday Evening
Wednesday
630 - Prayer Meeting
700-Bible Study
CHURCH OF CHRIST
608 East Seminole
10:30 - Sunday Worship
600- Evening Worship
Wednesday
730 -Services
MT. CARMEL BAPTIST
Reverend Harold Brewer
945 - Sunday School
11:00 - Morning Worship
6.30 - Training Union
730 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
700 - Evening Services
FIRST BAPTIST
Bruce McCray. Pastor
9:45 - Sunday School
11 :OO - Worship
6:00 - Training Union
7-00 ■ Services
Wednesday
7:00 - Services
FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
Jerry L. Wells, Pastor
9:45 - Sunday School
10:55 - Sunday Worship
600 - Church Training
700 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
700 - Evening Services
MT. ZION BAPTIST
Rev. Frank Rushing
4 Miles East, 11/2 North
9:45-Sunday School
Church2- & 4* Sundays
Wednesday
630 - Evening Services
MIDWAY BAPTIST
CHURCH-PERNELL
Todd Brady. Pastor
9:45 - Sunday School
11:00 - Morning Worship
7:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:00 Prayer Meeting & Bible Study
JOY CHRISTIAN
LIFE CENTER
Ken Moore, Pastor
Hwy 77 South
10:00 - Sunday School
11:00 - Morning Worship
600 - Evening Services
Wednesday
700 - Evening Services
SATTERWHITE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
H.E. Colwell. Pastor
10:00 - Morning Worship
5:30 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:00 - Services
UNITED METHODIST
Paul Hamilton, Pastor
9:45 - Sunday School
11:0O - Worship
7:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:00 - Evening Worship
HILLCREST BAPTIST
Gary Crawford, Pastor
945- Sunday School
10:45- Preaching The Word
6:00 - Training Services
6:45 - Preaching The Word
Wednesday
630 - Evening Services
prices qnnd
throuqh 6/30/95
at participating
NAPA
AUTO
PARTS
STORES
CHURCH OF CHRIST FOSTER
9:45 - Bible Study
10:45 - Morning Worship
6:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:30 - Bible Study
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Tim Denton, Minister
9:45 - Sunday Bible Study
10:45 - Morning Worship
6:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
6:30 - Ladies' Bible Class
7.30 - Bible Class
GREGORY
CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
1
(
I
Sharyne Glover and Kevin Pitmon
Sharyne Glover, Kevin
Pitman name July date
Elmore City
Church Schedule
Sponsor
WOOSTER FUNERAL HOME
Find Fellowship With Us!
SOUTHSIDE HOLINESS
10:00 - Morning Worship
6:30 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
7:00 - Services
LOVE BAPTIST
Russell Newville, Pastor
10:00 - Sunday School
11:00 - Sunday Services
7:00 - Evening Services
Wednesday
7:00 - Services
For Dad on Father’s Day, give
the gift that supplies him with free
green fees at many Oklahoma golf
courses. The 1995 American Cancer
Society Golf Pass provides golf at a
fraction of the normal cost.
“Over forty-eight courses will
waive a green fee if you present thre
1995 Golf Pass,” said Carrie
Mitchell, program coordinator.
“And the Pass is good until
December 31, 1995.”
Just S25 will allow dad to try
many courses, including seven
state-run courses. Buy several and
an entire group can enjoy the
savings. The contribution goes to
support the many programs of the
American Cancer Society.
To order the 1995 Golf Pass, call
1-800-733-9888 or your local
American Cancer Society office.
Visa, Mastercard and American
Express are accepted, and orders can
be taken by phone.
JOY BAPTIST CHURCH
Ron Armitage, Pastor
10:00 - Sunday School
10:45 - Sunday Worship
6:00 - Evening Worship
Golf Pass will make
a great dad's gift
i
1
1
Mettry's
Department Store
(
C
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST
Rev. Dr. Jim Hewett
9:45 - Sunday School
10:45 - Morning Worship
Wednesday
7:00 - Chancel Choir
Local References
Call 1-405-665-2184 Now
Harold Gregory
POWER HOUSE
CHURCH OF GOD
IN CHRIST
900 N. Robberson
Pastor Elder M.D. Major
9:45 - Sunday School
11:00 - Sunday Worship
Wednesday
6.00 -Bible Bond
that clean laundry had to be
“sprinkled down”, rolled in little
balls and left to "set” before being
brought to the ironing board. No
misting steam iron then for the lady
of the house, and, of course, the
iron had to be reheated constantly
on the stove top.
It has been noted in diaries that
one invited house guests the day
after all the ironing was done so
that one’s nicest things were freshly
done up for company. Also, the day
after ironing day freed up the maid,
if you had one, to prepare an
especially nice meal for guests.
By the late 1 800‘s the bar soaps
were available to be shaved and
used. Then, in 1906 Lux introduced
flakes; and in 1918 Rinso came
along with a granulated soap.
Home starch was flour and water
mixed, and by the turn of the
century, one could buy bluing to
use in the rinse water to help
clothes look brighter.
The agitating washer was first
introduced in 1846, saving the
ladies’ knuckles from the scrub
boards. In 1914 electric washers
were here, and in 15 short years
roughly seventy-five percent of
American families possessed an
electric washer.
Today we throw a load of wash in
Register to WIN a
sEBeaeE-o .
WATERCRAFT A
hang them in the basement to dry. .
. and dry... and dry.
I had a friend in Ireland who said
they hung their laundered clothes on
lines up in the high ceilings of the
homes. She said the ceilings often
were 15 feet high, so the lines had
to be rigged for raising and
lowering to put on and Like off
newly laundered wash.
Monday was a long day as
washing was usually an all-day
affair. Meals were simple with no
elaborate foods prepared and nothing
cooked that had a strong smell since
you didn’t want the clothes to pick
up odors.
If the family had a good income,
then a laundress was hired for a
typical sum of S30 per month.
Now, if you think about the wages
of the times, that was a pretty
princely sum of money to earn. The
work was hard, and no one frail or
weak need apply, as it took
considerable strength to scrub
clothes up and down a washboard,
run them through a wringer, or
wring them out by hand. The
washwoman made a steady income
and went about her work with no
one to bother her.
If a washwoman had her own
laundry equipment at home, she
was offered much more freedom.
Co-sponsored by Legal Aid of
Western Oklahoma, the Farm
Crisis Task Force of the Oklahoma
Bar Association, Ag-Link of
Chisholm Trails, and Oklahoma
Family Farm Services, the free
workshop will be held from. 7-10
p.m. in the Simmons Center at 800
N. 29 th
ONAPA)
(6)
You think you have a problem
with washing clothes? Well, here’s
a good recipe for washing clothes
by Anonymous in 1900:
1. Build fire in back yard to heat
kettle.
2. Set tubs so smoke won't blow
in eyes if wind is pert.
3. Shove one whole cake of lye
soap in boiling water.
4. Sort things, make one pile
coloured, one pile white, one pile
breeches and rags.
5. Stir Hour in cold water to
smooth. Thin down with boiling
water. Starch.
6. Rub dirty spots on board,
scrub hard, then boil. Rub coloreds
but don’t boil. Just rinse and starch.
7. Take white things out of kettle
with broom handle, then rinse, blue
and starch.
8. Spread tea towels on grass;
others on fence.
9. Put rinse water on flower beds.
10. Scrub porch with soapy
water.
11. Turn over the tub to drain.
12. Go put on a clean dress.
Smooth hair with side combs. Brew
tea. Sit and rest. Rock a spell.
Count your blessings.
That was a normal Monday wash
day, and every woman wished for a
sunny Monday. In the basement or
out-of-doors, the pots were set to
boil, and though it was not
mentioned in the “recipe”, you
always had some clothes set to soak
the night before. Come Monday the
arduous routine of washing,
rinsing, and wringing began. If the
weather was nice, you hung the
clothes out on the fence or on a
line. In bad weather you had to
•
HO FUKHM UQUIKID
Uf nminnHC
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-06
M-F
BY APPOINTMENT
DR. JIM CROCKETT
1205 W. Broadway
Sulphur, OK
Ph. 622-5959
(TOLL FREE) - 1-B0O-7224MR
safe
22 22222222222222
WYNNEWOOD
CHURCH SCHEDULE
Sponsors Are The Following Merchants:
three year member of the OSU Pom
Pom squad. Miss Harris is
presently employed by the Federal
Reserve Bank in Oklahoma City.
Brett Jameson is the son of Dr.
John and Cathy Jameson of Davis.
He is the grandson of Dorothy
Jameson of Davis and Derry Ebert
of Bartlesville. Brett graduated from
Davis High School in 1990 and
from Oklahoma State University in
1994 as the Outstanding Male
Graduate of the University and the
Outstanding Graduate of the
College of Arts and Sciences. He
was president of his fraternity.
Delta Tau Della, and the executive
director of the Student Alumni
Board. He is a sophomore medical
student at the University of
Oklahoma School of Medicine.
The couple plan to make their
home in Oklahoma City.
Kevin is a 1994 graduate of
Wynnewood High School and is
self-employed as a fanner-rancher.
The couple’s marriage ceremony
is scheduled for July 1, 1995, at
7:30 p.m. at the home of J. D. and
Doris Glover of Sulphur. A
reception will follow. Friends and
relatives arc cordially invited to
attend.
Following a short wedding trip,
the newlyweds will establish their
home in Davis.
• Gas Blast OCTANE
#22 BOOSTER Faal Treatment,
** BRAKE CLEANER
7 CHEMTOOL $199
g/flyL. TOM CHOICE 1 * /
Amy Michelle Harris of
Bartlesville and Breiton Howard
Jameson of Davis announce their
engagement and upcoming marriage
at 7:30 p.m. on July 8, 1995 at the
First United Methodist Church in
Bartlesville, Oklahoma.
The future bride is the daughter of
Mike and Sally Harris of
Bartlesville. She is the
granddaughter of Laurie Schlobohm
of Reading, Kansas and Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Harris of Hamilton,
Kansas. Miss Harris is a 1990
graduate of Tulsa Union High
School and a 1994 graduate of
Oklahoma State University where
she was named one of the Top Ten
Graduating Senior Students of the
College of Business. She was
president of the Business Student
Council, president of her sorority.
Kappa Alpha Theta, and was a
LIBERTY BAPTIST
Brother Marion Oden
10:00- Sunday School
11:00- Morning Worship
5:00- Bible Study
6:00 - Evening Worship
Wednesday
730 - Evening Services
For Transportation Call
238-5463 or 238-5674
Nursing 1 (
Home News] v
..................-.....
“The Farmer and U.S.
Department of Agriculture” will
deal with FHA/USDA loan
servicing and settlement procedures
and will feature financial planner
James Watt.
and return later to throw the load in
the dryer. Yet it’s a common thing
to hear heart-rending groans from
those who must go to a
laundromat. Alas! and Woe! Better
that than having to follow the
recipe provided by the homemaker
of 1900.
THE CHURCH OF GOD EASTERN GATE BAPTIST
Ben Rogers, Pastor Randy Rhea, Pastor
Seminole & Long Streets 9:45 - Sunday School
10:00 - Sunday School 10:45 - Morning Worship
11:00 - Sunday Worship MID - Evening Wonhip
6100 - Evening Worship Wednesday
Wednesday 710D - Evening Services
6:00 - Evening Worship
Hello from Our Place, the
Wynnewood Convalescent home.
Pew! is heard often these days in
our home due to the men working
on the hand rails, etc. We residents
are still very sensitive to hearing,
seeing, feeling, tasting and
smelling. It seems each of us have
one or more of these as a problem.
Odors seem to be the most disliked,
but despite the pungent odor, it is
very important to remember that
the work efforts could result in
saving a life.
Hearing is the frustrating one.
We strive to hear what is meant for
us to hear or words that make up
our conversations. We can learn
liprcading with time and effort. A
touch of the hand by someone can
cause confusion or quick anxiety,
even anger. Our caregivers in the
home need to know of these senses
being affected so they can work
toward our best interest. Often this
impairment changes our attitude and
the quality of our fellowship. Don’t
ever poke fun or make a joke about
the actions of a resident who suffers
from affected nerve ends.
Our ministry from Pernell
Church of Christ was well received.
We appreciate their spiritual care for
us. We know it is more than a hop,
skip and jump you have to travel.
Thanks for each Sunday Service
you bring.
Monday morning. Memorial
Day, brought beautiful sun,
although it did not last through the
day. We had visitors early. Some
transitions of employees were
noticed. There was rain before the
day was out.
A good number were in the
Devotion Hour, twenty-five to be
exact. Darold Schafer and others
participated this time. It leaves a
bright spot in our day. Early this
morning we had volunteers helping
with breakfast. One was an
exchange student from Brazil.
During our Devotional service she
played such beautiful music on the
piano.She will be returning to her
homeland in a few days. She would
be an asset to our home. Remember
that you will always be welcome
and appreciated. We all appreciate
and love her for the care she gives.
The new units are doing good in
their efforts of health care for both
home and community.
We had our exercise Wednesday
morning and Care Plans in the
afternoon.
Neva was busy-busy on
Thursday. We all appreciate and
love her for the care she gives.
Bingo was good. We do appreciate
this hour. It does something for our
attitudes.
Friday came up without activity
as Judy had the day off. We missed
our Bible Class as it is an
inspiration we build faith on.
Saturday was gray and windy. A
few sat under the gum tree. Others
did just as they pleased. A few
visitors came whom we enjoy,
knowing they care for us shut-ins.
Thanks. You are always welcome.
Thought For The Week: A fun-
loving spirit makes one feel
valuable and capable.
• I
AFN
—v
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The Wynnewood Gazette (Wynnewood, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1995, newspaper, June 8, 1995; Wynnewood, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2034932/m1/4/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.