The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1982 Page: 2 of 10
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P. 2, Perry Daily Journal Friday, January 15, 1982
The Perry Daily Journal
MEMBER C
Published six days weekly less holi
days at 714 Delaware St Perry Okla
noma by The Perry Journal Com
pany Second class Postage Paid at
Perry. Okia 73077
MEDICAL SCHOOL
Successor to The Noble County Sentinel established Sept 16 1893 The Perry
Republican, merged May 1. 1924 and The Morrison Transcript, merged May
1 1958
All unsolicited manuscripts letters and pictures brought or sent to The
Journal are submitted at the risk of the sender The publishersexpressly dis
claim any responsibility for their safe return
STATE BOARD
MEDICAL EXAMINERS
LICENSE a
Milo W Watson
Gene Taylor
Mabel Miller
Ernest Stoops
Editor & Publisher
Managing Editor
Advertising Manager
Production Superintendent
NOTICE
OF DEFAULT
STUDENT LOAN
Subscription Rates
Single copy
By Carrier -
Per Month
Six Months
Per Year
By Mail
15c
$3.25
$19 25
$38 00
Noble Logan Payne, Pawnee
Kay, Garfield, Osage and Grant
Counties
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
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$28 56
$16 32
$ 9.18
$ 5 61
At Perry Postoffice Box
One Year
By Mail Elsewhere
in Oklahoma
One Year
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Three Months
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By Mail Outside Oklahoma
One Year
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Three Months
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$ 7.00
: : POLLY’S POINTERS
A. Polly Fisher
STEIN
XCkY MIN.
EWS ‘81
Pup stained floor
By Polly Fisher
DEAR POLLY — I have a young dog who, unknown to me,
was frequently wetting on a braided rug Now there is a
black spot on the wood floor Do you have any information
on how to remove this black area from the floor? — O.T.N.
DEAR O.T.N. — First apply paint stripper to the black
spot to remove the finish, then treat the spot with wood
bleach (available at your hardware store) or regular chlorine
bleach This may well remove the spot. If it doesn’t entirely
remove the black stain, however, try sanding the black area
very gently with fine sandpaper until all the black is
removed. After removing the spot, whether with bleach or
sanding, refinish the area to match the rest of the floor. —
POLLY
Two Reform
HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.
Bills Pass
New cataract operation?
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I
had my eyes examined
recently as I knew I needed
my glasses changed. The
doctor told me I have
cataracts. I’m now con-
technique uses ultra sound
and a small incision. Yes,
you can literally have the
lens of the eye removed at
any stage of a cataract if it
is advisable to do so
Yes, the cataract lens can
be removed and a new lens
DEAR POLLY - To preserve newspaper clippings, dis-
solve a milk of magnesia tablet in a quart of club soda in a
pan large enough to accommodate the flattened paper Soak
the newspaper one hour and pat it dry. This will make the
newspaper last for years — MARTHA
DEAR POLLY - When my children were young, I cov-
ered many a spot and stain (or even small holes) in their
clothes with appliques (flowers or other interesting shapes)
made from old scraps of fabric This can be very attractive.
I’ve had lots of compliments on these clothes. If you want to
admit that the applique is covering a stain, you’ll be consid-
ered very clever! — MRS. N.B
DEAR POLLY — Here's a quick way to have your break-
fast ready in just a few minutes It’s also perfect to eat "on
the run." I call it Carol’s Sunrise Split and butter one Eng-
lish muffin Place in a small skillet and brown very lightly.
Remove to a plate. Warm one slice deli-style ham in the
skillet (on both sides), then place the ham on top of one muf-
fin half Beat one egg, fry it in the skillet until done to your
liking and place it on top of the ham. Then top the whole
sandwich with the other muffin half Enjoy. — CAROL
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper
coupon clippers if she uses your favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column. Write POLLY’S POINTERS in care
of this newspaper.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
LAND SAKES, I SOLD
THAT OLD BUGGY
With A Want Ad
ACROSS
1 Saws
5 Man’s
nickname
8 Shaped with
an ax
12 Egg-shaped
13 Macao coin
14 Being in a
fairy tale
15 Dutch
embankment
16 Japanese
currency
17 Ditch around
a castle
18 Slid down hill
20 Grinds
21 Deutschland
(abbr.)
22 Eighth month
(abbr.)
23 Scatter
26 Truth
30 Tares
31_____
Christian
Anderson
32 Both
33 New England
cape
34 This way
35 Mane
36 Fireplug
38 Suit material
39 Ones (Fr.)
40 Crash against
41 Oscillated
44 Crest
48 Group of
animals
49 Stagnate
50 Buckeye State
51 River in
Tuscany
52 Hail
53 Breton
54 Muddle
55 Aye
56 Islands near
Florida
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ElY|E|L|E|T
A E R O BE
TARPON
WO R| D
/ELIF
10
MS
DOWN
12
15
18
23
30
33
36
4 1
48
51
54
7
3
24
25
42
43
HNO
0
T
A
S
U.F
MT u
Bis
AE
5
E R
MA RIK' e'
S T|E|E|D
10 Enclose in
paper
11 Fishing aids
19 Morning
moisture
20 Baseball
points
22 First-rate
(comp. wd.)
23 Former head
1 Cement
containers
2 Immoral
3 Ship’s track
4 Heavy sleighs of Iran
5 Less common 24 Singer Martin
6 Latin poet
25 Cleave
26 Deer
7 Negative
prefix _. ________,
8 Reverential re- 28 Sprig
gard 29 Past time
9 Selves 31 Poultry
27 Celebrity
M A S T 1 I | C
34 Suspend
35 Poison
37 Musical
movements
38 Sodium
chloride
(abbr.)
40 Ceremonies
41 Trick
42 Past of to be
43 Pots
44 Lifted
45 You (archaic)
46 Oleaginous
47 Cooking
utensils
49 Light beam
cerned about having the implanted within the eye.
cataracts removed. I’ve This type of surgery is not
heard that a new method for everyone. It is more
permits them to be removed often used in older people,
at an early stage rather than And it has many advantages
waiting until they are ripe in selected cases. As new
Also there is one way called contact lenses are developed
an implant which is fairly that can be left in for weeks,
new months and maybe even
Would you please tell me years the advantages, if any.
if it is possible to have them of implants compared to
removed at an early stage contact lenses may not be
and what the operation is very important.
called'’ DEAR DR LAMB - I
DEAR READER — read in your column about
Before you start worrying the little girl who developed
about which operation to rheumatoid arthritis. My
have you need to know if you grandson, also 12 years old.
even need an operation. The was diagnosed as having
decision on whether rheumatoid arthritis
cataracts should be removed However, when the treat-
or not is based mostly on ment did not help he was
two points. How good is your referred to another doctor
vision? Are cataracts your He actually had rheumatic
only problem or do you have fever His treatment was
other defects that may changed and he is doing fine
affect your vision0 now after about a year. I
Many people have small wondered if the little girl
cataracts that are not in the could also have the wrong
line of sight through the lens diagnosis
and really do not interfere DEAR READER - Rheu-
with vision. These don't need matic fever is sometimes
to be removed You will hard to differentiate from
need to depend upon your rheumatoid arthritis. Rheu-
eye doctor's evaluation of matic fever can, and in some
your eyes to get an answer regions often does, cause red
that applies to your particu- hot swollen joints, an
lar condition. inflammatory reaction. It is
If you need surgery the caused by a complication of
choice of the type of opera- streptococcal infections
tion also depends upon the (strep throat, for example),
characteristics of your own The cause of rheumatoid
eyes arthritis is not known,
You are asking me about although there are encour-
the phacoemulsification aging leads in some cases,
technique It is described related to infections, too
briefly in The Health Letter With laboratory tests, such
number 13-6, Your as those that measure the
Cataracts Are Coming, immune reaction to strepto-
which I am sending you. Oth- coccal infections, it is usual-
ers who want this issue can ly possible to separate the
send 75 cents with a long, two conditions. And. of
stamped, self-addressed course, most cases of rheu-
envelope for it to me, in care matic fever can be prevent-
of this newspaper. P.O. Box ed if streptococcal infections
1551, Radio City Station, are diagnosed and treated
New York, NY 10019 soon enough.
The phacoemulsification (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.,
The Almanac
4
21
37
39
19
3 4
5
13
16
31
49
52
55
22
8
9
10
11
14
17
EE
2 6
44
35
27
28
29
38
50
53
56
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
32
45
46
47
By United Press Imernadonal
Today is Friday, Jan. 15, the
15th day of 1982 with 350 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star is Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Capricorn.
Civil rights leader Martin
Luther King was born Jan. 15,
1929. American actors Lloyd
Bridges and Margaret O’Brien
also were born on Jan. 15 — he
in 1913 - she in 1937.
On this date in history:
In 1870, a cartoon done by
Thomas Nast appeared in
Harper's weekly with a donkey
symbolizing the Democratic
Party for the first time. The
symbol stuck.
In 1922, the Irish Free State
was formed.
In 1943, the Pentagon, the
world's largest building of its
kind, was completed on the
Virginia side of the Potomac
River just outside Washington,
D.C.
In 1976, a federal judge
sentenced Sara Jane Moore to
prison for life for her attempt
to assassinate President Ford
in San Francisco.
A thought for the day: Dr.
Martin Luther King, Nobel
Peace Prize-winner, said, "In-
justice anywhere is a threat to
justice everywhere."
The World Almanac®
1. What is the "Harvest
Moon?" (a) a novel by
Ernest Hemingway (b) a
new hybrid corn (c) the full
moon nearest the Autumnal
Equinox
2. Phineas T. Barnum, Sam-
uel Colt, Nathan Hale,
Katharine Hepburn, J. Pier-
pont Morgan are all from (a)
Georgia (b) New Jersey (c)
Connecticut
3 The average cost of lead-
ed regular gasoline in 1974
was 44 8 cents per gallon.
What was the cost in 1980?
(a) 65.8 (b) 89.9 (c) 119.1
Committee
By KAY McCARTHY
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -
Two county reform bills creat-
ing the job of county purchas-
ing agent and cutting the
county commissioner term of
office to two years have passed
in House committee.
Rep. Vernon Dunn, D-Loco,
chief sponsor of both bills said
the county purchasing agent
would make it "an impossibility
of having split claims” because
they could not be kept secret
from the purchasing agent.
Prosecutors allege some com-
missioners have been buying
county equipment and then
splitting a kickback with the
supplier who sold it to them.
Rep. Don Duke, D-Ardmore,
asked Dunn if the county
commissioners could cut the
county clerk’s budget if they
were upset about work by the
county purchasing agent.
Dunn said they could, but if
they did “it’s going to take
(them) five to six months to get
a load of lumber. They can get
back at you real quickly.”
The proposal to create a
county purchasing agent drew
opposition from the County
Clerks Association because the
bill calls for county clerks to
take on the job of county
purchasing agent or to hire an
agent.
McClain County Clerk Nelda
Gray, association president,
told the County Government
Committee the responsibility
should be shared by all elected
county officials.
An amendment to that effect
failed, but its author, Rep. Guy
Davis, D-Calera, said he might
introduce it on the House floor.
The bill calls for the county
purchasing agent to follow a set
procedure for taking bids for
equipment and buying it. The
bill requires the agent to obtain
a price list from the State
Central Purchasing Agency and
compare the bids with it.
Some commissioners have
been accused of paying much
more for equipment than if
they had gone through State
Central Purchasing.
The bill sets out seven steps
for payment of purchases to try
to end the practice, uncovered
in the federal investigation, of
payment for goods that were
never delivered.
The bill says the purchasing
agent does not have to compare
prices with Central Purchasing
on purchases of $250 or less.
The bill also requires the
county to include in published
legal notices expenditures by
county commissioners and the
vendor in the transaction. Dunn
said the current legal notices
don’t give enough detail and
"the taxpayer has a right to
see where the money is being
spent."
Davis’ amendment would
have set up a board of all
elected county officials to hire
or fire the purchasing agent.
Davis said the board would not
meet if the county clerk were
the purchasing agent. The
amendment failed, 6-4.
The other bill would make
county commissioner terms two
years instead of four years.
Dunn aid the four-year terms
"got (commissioners) away
from the people.”
TTA T • Ti • 29-24n-le (3-26-80 et al)
1 A TTT WAUWAT Strata Exploration Inc. to
AV I I AY IY. Jefferson- Williams Energy
Corp 12-30-81 $10 Lts6 &7 & eh
sw% 6-20n-le (9-10-80)
Min-Tex Oil Corp to Com-
merce Energy Partnership
1975-A et al 6-8-81 $1 Und
91-2/3% wh se% & se% sw%
ll-22n-2e; nw% set & se% sw%
ll-22n-2e & sw%4 se% 11-22n-2e;
ne% ne% 14-22n-2e; se% ne%
14-22n-2e; e4 se% ll-22n-2e
(4-1-76 et al)
Same to Same 6-5-81 $1 Und
45.833% ne% 11-22n-2e; s’ set
2-22n-2e (9-5-80 et al)
Assignment of
Overriding Royalty
Min-Tex Oil Corp to C. L.
gets the man of the house 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/64 WI Same Barlow et al 6-2-81 $10 7-1/2%
kicked out of the Chicago Same to Wilma Smith 1-7-82 $1 W'2 se% & seX sw% ll-22n-2e
school system — will run every Und 3/32nds WI Same (4-1-76) .
Saturday from 8-9 p.m. Same to Mary Holt 1-7-82 $1 Same to Same 6-2 81 $10
"King’s Crossing" is rich in Und 3/32nds WI Same 5-1/2% nw%4 se% & set sw^
mystery, insanity, drunkenness, Same to Ellis Investments 11-22n-2e; sw% se% ll-22n-2e
failure, scheming and seduction Inc. 1-7-82 $1 Und l/32nd WI (4-2-76) .
— in short, all those wonderful Same , Same to Same 6-2-81 $10
things that make a soap opera Same to Fred Calaway 1-7-82 11/496 nw* se 4 ll-22n-2e (9-2-
a soap opera. It may degener- $1 Und 1/32nd WI Same "same to Same 6-2-81 $10
3-1/3% ne% Il-22n-2e; s% se%
2-22n-2e (9-5-80 et al)
Ratification & Rental
Stipulation
Sandra Donaldson to J. W.
McTiernan 8-14-81 $1 s4 sw%
8-20n-le
David Donaldson to Same
8-14-81 $1 s‛2 sw% 8-20n-le
Therese Donaldson to Same
people’s problems, is the $1 Und 1/16 WI Same 8-14-81 $1 sh SW% 8-20n-le
uncontested star of the show. Same to Morton Hay 1-7-82 $1 tan day 1
Mary Frann. fine as her long- Und 1/64 WI Same Hilary Hagperc to The Public
suffering mother and Bradford Same to Waved Oil 1-7-82 $1 M MI NO MSWY
Dillman shines through a poetic Und 1/32 WI Same 222-wiond 1/320th NI SW*4
alcoholic fog as her father - a Same to Harold Haught 1-7-82 420 2w:,Xind 9/160ths “ "
failed playwright turned tea- $1 Und 1/32 WI Same ^Z 2922n-1w; nd 1′8 M
cher. Same to Kathy Elliott 1-7-82 $1 "^ 32-22n-2e; Und 1/32 MI
Like most prime-tune pro- Und 1/64 WI Same next 32-n 2e ddad/1 ATAL MT
graming, "King’s Crossing" is Same to ERA Oil 1-7-82 $1 Und , ’ Ond 1 MI ne 4
not likely to add great things to 1/64 WI Same me 5
the human condition, but soap Same to Ditto or Dovie Hick- Certificate of Non Development
fans probably will adopt it. son 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/64 WI Same e Pbieigzen t 921
ABC could use a little love. Same to John Pettit 1-7-82 $1 Ine Warranty Deed
So far, the network has Und 1/64 WI Same William Edwards et ux to R
watched the bulk of its new Same to Jesse Hickson et al L. Frailey Inc. 1-11-82 $10 Pt
season material — "Strike 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/64 WI Same ne% 28-21n-lw
Force,” "Best of the West,” Same to Frank Horine 1-7-82 Sharon Yost et vir to M
"Today’s FBI,” "Making a $1 Und 1/64 WI Same Sidney Yost 1-11-82 $10 sel.
Living,” "Code Red,” “Dark- Same to Bailey Hickson 1-7-82 14-23n-2w
room" and "Open All Night”- $1 Und 1/32 WI Same Edna Mason to The Edna
sink like so many bags of Same to Geralyn Gigoux Col- Mason Trust 12-29-81 $10 Und
cement to the bottom of the lins 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/64 WI Same 1/80 MI nw% 27-21n*2w
ratings heap. Same to Jack Blew 1-7-82 $1 crimpers
In light of that growing Und 1/64 WI Same Michael Kinnamon to Lvon
catastrophe, “King's Crossing” Same to Robert Blew 1-7-82 $1 Kinnaren 1582 SI0 L.T BN 2
has the stuff of which redemp- Und 1/64 WI Same s
tion just might be made. Same to K. E Kebert et al Journal Entry of Judgment
... . . . 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/32 WI Same District Court of Noble Co. to
Viewers with access to the Berry Petroleum 1980 Ton- Nicholas Frevmann
ABC ARTS channel will have a kawa Drilling Program to Ber- Heirs et al or Josephine Frey-
second chance Saturday to dine ry Petroleum Corp 11-2-81 $1 marin Deceased et al Derndts
at one of the finest video 36% nw% 17-20n-lw (9-15-80) 1-1182 Und 1/8 MT A TEL
banquets in recent television Assignment of Oil & Gas Lease 32-20n-1w
memory when Philip Anglim Hadson Petroleum Corp to Mineral Deed
serves up his version of Hadson 1981-A Oil and Gas Pro- M. Sidney Yost et ux to
gram 10-14-81 $10 ne set; SV Sharon Yost 1-11-82 $10 Und
se 20-24n-le; sw nw 28-24n-le; 1155/2520 MI s^ se% & ne%
ne44 ne%; s4 ne 4 nw ne se% & e1 nw% se% 14-23n-2w
By KENNETH R. CLARK
UPI TV Reporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
world may or may not need
another prime-time soap opera,
but as of Saturday, it will have
one called "King's Crossing,”
and as soapers go, this one has
suds enough to launder several
million minds.
"King's Crossing" makes its
90-minute debut for ABC at 8
p.m., EST. Thereafter, the
fortunes and misfortunes of the
Hollister family — which moves
and will be repeated Saturday,
makes classical Shakespeare a
contemporary art form. The
hard himself would have loved
it.
Noble County
Legal Record
Partial Assignment Of Oil &
Gas Lease
C. L. & S. Oil Co. Inc. to Dean
Pike 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/16 WI sw%
to a small California town after sw% 25-22n-2w (8-11-51)
a losing bout with the bottle Same to M & R Investments
ate as time goes by, but the Same to B B H Oil Co. Inc.
pilot at least displays none of 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/16 WI Same
the raging sexploitation of Same to William Hughes M.
“Dallas” and "Dynasty.” D. 1-7-82 $1 Und 1/64 WI Same
That fact may not get it into Same to Duane Dickson 1-7-82
the Nielsen Top 10, but it’s not $1 Und 1/16 WI Same
likely to get it on anybody's Same to Bill Johnson 1-7-82 $1
moralistic hit list either. Und l/32nd WI Same
Marilyn Jones, as a brash. Same to Wilbur Davis 1-7-82 $1
idealistic teenage tomboy who Und 1/16 WI Same
can’t keep her hands off other Same to Linda Shahan 1-7-82
William Shakespeare’s “Mac-
Beth.”
When a play is 400 years old
and still a box-office hit, there
are not many ways in which
the roles can be uniquely
played. Anglim finds some and
so, to the everlasting fascina-
tion with wickedness, does
Maureen Anderman in the role
of Lady MacBeth.
When Miss Anderman cries
"out damned spot,” the spot in
question very nearly exits.
MacBeth and his murderous
wife traditionally are portrayed
as a middle-aged couple.
Anglim — whose "Elephant
Man” already is a classic of
stage and television — and
Miss Anderman are anything
but middle-aged. Yet in the
very vigor of their youth is the
ambition that drives them to
mayhem made more believa-
ble.
The ARTS presentation,
which made its debut Tuesday
Mirrors Of
Yesterday
Five Years Ago
Millard M. Pierce, Billings,
was presented a 50-year Ma-
sonic Service pin.
Ten Years Ago
The city council voted to give
city employes a $15 per month
raise...Dennis Howard, Mul-
hall, showed the open class
grand champion wether at the
National Western Stock show at
Denver.
ANSWERS
0 8073’1
Get help fast, fast, fast....Try
the Classified page.
SCHOOL
LuncH mEnu
PERRY
- Elementary
Monday — Pizza, buttered
corn, combination salad and
sliced peaches.
Tuesday — Hamburger,
french fries, hamburger salad,
fruit and cookie.
Wednesday — Spanish rice
with beef, green beans, lettuce
salad, chocolate brownie and
batter bread.
Thursday — Turkey and
noodles, mashed potatoes, peas,
% apple and hot roll.
Friday — Barbecued turkey
on bun, baked potato, cabbage
salad and fruit pie.
Milk served with every meal.
Junior High
Monday — Frito pie or
cheeseburger, french fries, let-
tuce and tostados and fruit roll.
Tuesday — Macaroni and
cheese or steak sandwich, fried
okra, buttered peas, diced pine-
apple and hot rolls.
Wednesday — Taco or cheese-
burger, buttered corn, lettuce
and tomatoes and apple pie.
Thursday — Turkey and
noodles or corndog, green
beans, cole slaw, orange juice
and hot rolls.
Twenty Years Ago Friday — Meat loaf or sloppy
The Orlando high school girls joes, oven fried potatoes, broc-
defeated the Crescent girls 48-15 coli with cheese, strawberry
in a basketball game played on shortcake and hot rolls.
the Orlando court...The Perry
Business and Professional
Women’s club was sponsoring
the sale of ‘medic-alert’ brace-
lets.
Milk served with every meal.
Salad bar offered each day.
MULHALL-ORLANDO
Elementary
Thirty Years Ago Monday - Breakfast — Jelly
William T. Smith began work toast and raisins. Lunch - Fish
at the Perry post office as a krispies, macaroni and cheese,
substitute clerk...Mrs. William sliced tomatoes, wheat rolls
Freese was hostess to Wimo- with butter and birthday cake,
dausis home demonstration Tuesday — Breakfast — Gin-
members. gerbread and orange wedge.
Forty Years Ago Lunch — Salisbury steak with
Ted H. Kimball was projec- red gravy, mashed potatoes,
tionist at the new Perry green beans, bread sticks and
Theatre. pumpkin pie.
Wednesday — Breakfast —
French toast with syrup and
apple wedge. Lunch — Chicken
and noodles, blackeyed peas,
coleslaw, rolls with butter and
orange whip.
Thursday — Breakfast —
Sausage gravy, biscuits and
grape juice. Lunch — Sloppy
joe, potato salad, carrot sticks
and fruited jello.
Friday — Breakfast — Oat-
meal and pineapple. Lunch —
Vegetable soup, crackers,
cheese sandwiches, peanut but-
ter sandwiches and purple
plums.
Milk served with every meal.
MORRISON
Monday — Breakfast —
Grape juice, oatmeal and toast.
Lunch — Coney with chili, car-
rots and celery sticks and
apricot cobbler.
Tuesday — Breakfast —
Grape juice, sausage and gra-
vy, biscuits and jelly. Lunch —
Oven fried chicken, potatoes
and gravy, blackeyed peas,
strawberry shortcake and hot
roll.
Wednesday — Breakfast —
Orange juice, rice and cin-
namon toast. Lunch — Bar-
becued pork, french fries, whole
kernel corn and banana pud-
ding.
Thursday — Breakfast —
Orange juice, scrambled eggs
with sausage, toast and jelly.
Lunch — Beef and vegetable
stew, cheese sticks, crackers,
fruit and jello and cinnamon
roll.
Friday — Breakfast — Grape
juice, cinnamon roll and oat-
meal. Lunch — Hamburger
steaks, potatoes and gravy,
buttered peas and peanut butter
cookie.
Milk served with every break-
fast; choice of milk or tea with
every lunch.
Chef’s salad offered at each
lunch.
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Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1982, newspaper, January 15, 1982; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2253342/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.