The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 27, 1982 Page: 2 of 8
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P. 2. Perry Daily Journal Saturday, March 27, 1982
The Perry Daily Journal Noble County Legal Record
MEMBER 3 Published six davs weekiv less holi Assignment of Overriding
Published six days weekly less hob
days at 714 Delaware St Perry. Okla
homa, by The Perry Journal Com
pany Second class Postage Paid at
Perry. Okla. 73077
Successor to The Noble County Sentinel established Sept 16, 1893 The Perry
Republican, merged May). 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 publishers expressly dis
claim any responsibility for their safe return.
Rates
Editor & Publisher
Managing Editor
Advertising Manager
Production Superintendent
15c At Perry Postoffice Box
One Year
$3.25 By Mail Elsewhere
$19 25 in Oklahoma
538 00 One Year
1, Payne, Pawnee,
1. Osage and Grant
$28 56
$16.32
$ 9 18
$ 5 61
Six Months
Three Months
One Month
By Mail Outside Oklahoma
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
One Month
$33 78
$33 66
$18.87
$10.76
$ 6.12
$38 00
$21.00
$11 00
$ 7 00
Keeping
In
1 Touch
3mA by Senator Don Nickles
MORE WASTE, FRAUD, AND ABUSE
I Your tax dollars at
work:
$17,000. This amount
was siphoned from the gov-
ernment by an employee
who used her official posi-
tion to have fraudulent pay-
roll checks issued to two ac-
complices, according to a
recent General Accounting
Office (GAO) report.
$18,000. An individ-
ual borrowed $30,000 from
the Small Business Admin-
istration to buy a business.
This person only paid
$12,000 for the business,
and used the rest of the loan
for personal use.
$112,000. A postal
clerk stole numerous mail
pouches containing cash,
coins, and jewelry. Again,
the government was forced
to pick-up the total loss (at
tax pay er expense).
$60,000. That's how
much money was embezzled
by a federal employee at a
Veterans Administration
medical center during a five
year period The money was
taken from a cash-on-hand
fund used for the miscella-
neous needs of the facility.
The problem has
grown to tremendous pro-
portions. The GAO states,
"fraud has been detected in
every agency in our re-
view...actual losses due to
fraud and other illegal ac-
tivities will never be known
because most go un-
detected" The GAO says
that more than $100 million
a year is lost to fraud...and
those are just the small
percentage of cases it has
uncovered.
It’s
no wonder the
average citizen has lost con-
fidence in the government's
ability to manage its pro-
grams. It’s outrageous that
government employees can
commit illegal acts without
fear of prompt, or possibly
any, federal action.
Here’s an example. An
individual embezzled nearly
$16,000 in Law Enforce-
ment Assistance Admin-
istration grant funds. She
was caught, sentenced to
three years probation, and
required to repay the stolen
money. But it’s doubtful
whether she will be able to
repay the government.
Under terms agreed to by
the district court handling
the case, she is to repay the
government at a rate of $20
a month. Thus, it will take
her about 65 years to repay
the stolen money.
The only real and long
term solution to the pro-
blem is to reverse the
growth of government.
There are too many tax
dollars going to too many
projects without enough
responsible supervision. No
area of government which
receives tax dollars should
be
unchecked...there
should be no sacred cows.
Until Congress puts the
country’s needs before all
else, waste, fraud, and
abuse will remain all too
common.
40 Annual
(abbr)
41 Steal
ACROSS
1 Talking bird
5 Leftist
8 Skirt
12 Anchor
13 Caravansary
14 Indefinite per-
Answer to Previous Puzzle
42 Aquatic birds AL
45 Box-shaped E
49 Gentle LALS
50 Dust cloth ICIRT
51 Russian
w D|Y|A|D] FT
11 o A Hu Al
EDECH
sons council
15 Vase-shaped 52 Shaped like
jug an egg
16 Tibetan 53 Police alert
Axelle 54 Short jacket
17 Apothecary’s Chromosome
weight Doll
18 island near 57 Astronaut
Athens
20 Makes
is AjD|E
s
_____Slayton
DOWN
1 Mesdames
(abbr.)
26 Mores 2 Stamkeye
30 Mao----3 Playwright
tung Coward
31 But (Fr.) 4 Out-and-out
32 Seance sound 5 Uncompromis-
33 Cry of ing
surprise 6 Baseballer
34 Trifle Slaughter
35 Affirmative re- 7 Genetic
ply
36 Violent wind
acquaintance
21 Actor Sparks
22 Mayday signal
23 Minerals
9 Concerning (2 29 Went quickly
wds., Lat.,
abbr.)
10 Soigne
11 Dogmata
19 Intermediate
38 Lettuce dish
1123
material
(abbr.)
8 Bashful
(prefix)
20 Peat
22 Man s
garment
23 Stationary
24 Pale
25 Jump
26 Abel’s brother
27 Kind of test
28 Central
American
Indian
31 Lune
34 Puts on
37 Crank
38 Shed tears
39 Lived with
41 Football in
England
42 Air pollution
43 Marry a
woman
44 Heraldic dog
45 Head (It)
46 Adorable
47 Frenzied state
48 Ocean route
50 Betrayer (sl.)
15
18
19
21
23
24
25
30
33
EU
36
37
40
42
43
44
49
52
55
5
13
16
31
50
53
56
6
7
8
9
10
11
14
17
22
26
41
20
39
51
54
57
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
27
28
29
32
35
46
47
48
Royalty
Bonray Energy Corp to Bon-
ray Oil & Gas Fund et al 3-9-82
$1 Var Int Pt sw% 19-22n-2w; Pt
19-22n-2w (1-4-82)
Kennedy & Mitchell Inc. to
William Hulsizer et al 2-26-82 $10
4.5% ORRI nw% 35-21n-2w (11-
16-81)
Southwestern Resources 1980
Drilling Program to CCC Re-
sources Inc. 2-17-82 $1 Und
0625% of 8/8 sw% se% 28-21n-le
(2-20-79)
L. F. Downey Energy Inc. to
Neal-Vaughan Energy Inc. 3-14-
82 $10 2.25% of 8/8 sw% sw% &
Lt 8 of 34-20n-1w; sh2 se% & Lt 8
of 33-20n-lw; (12-10-81 et al)
Same to Larry Downey $10
1.00 of 8/8 ORRI sw% set
33-20n-lw (12-10-81 et al)
Order Allowing Final Acct. Etc.
County Court of Okla. Co. to
Est. of Cyrus Anderson 7-21-54 w
sw 14-21n-2w; (3/64 of Minerals)
nw 15-21n-2w (1/256 of 1/8 RI) ne
16-21n-2w; (1/128 of Minerals)
ne 33-22n-1w (1/64 of Minerals)
District Court of Okla. Co. to
Est. of Metilda Morgan 3-18-82
nw%4 25-24n-2w; Und 1/2 Int sh
25-24n-2w; Und 120/6480 MI nV
seta 24-24n-2w
Mineral Deed
Margaret Hoffman to Carol
Williams 3-22-82 $1 Und 0.3125 of
one acre MI set 27-23n-2w
Violet Volway to James Mc-
Daniel et al 3-19-82 $10 Lts 3 & 4
& sh nw% 2-22n-2w
Oil and Gas Lease
Ernest Shryock et ux to Jef-
ferson-Williams Energy Corp
1-27-82 $10 Lts 3 & 4 of the nw%
5-21n-2e; Pt sh nw%a 5-21n-2e;
Pt sw%4 5-21n-2e 2 yrs
Eileen Donahue to Same 2-17-
82 $10 se% 6-21n-2e 1 yr
Arthur Emery et ux to Strata
Explor Inc. 2-15-82 $10 ne%
13-22n-2w 2 yrs
Same to Same 2-15-82 $10 n1
& se% se% 13-22n-2w 2 yrs
William Ford to Don Fuhr-
man 8-10-81 $10 se%a 21-21n-2w 3
yrs
Kent Schneider Attorney in
fact for Lottie Schneider to
Same 2-3-82 $10 wh ne% & se%a
ne% 28-21n-2w 2 yrs
Verna Doyle to Same 2-3-82
$10 st nw% 27-21n-2w 2 yrs
Kent Schneider Attorney in
fact for Lottie Schneider to
Same 2-3-82 $10 se% 21-21n-2w 2
yrs
George Dolezal to Same 2-3-82
$10 se% 21-21n-2w 2 yrs
David Matthews Jr. et ux to
Joe Hanna 2-3-82 $10 Pt et sw%
& Pt sw% sw%4 & Pt sh nw%
sw* 28-22n-1w 3 yrs
The City of Perry to William
Gengler et al 2-15-82 $10 nV
nw%4 14-21n-1w 1 yr
Partial Assignment
of Oil & Gas Lease
Wil-Mc Oil Corp to Southwest
Explor Capital Ltd et al 2-3-82
$10 Var Und Int nw% sw* &
ne% sw% sw% 3-21n-2w (4-17-
81)
Assignment of Oil & Gas Lease
Philip Lowry to C& K Petrol-
eum Inc. 12-29-81 $1 Blk #8 Case
Add to Marland 14-24n-le (12-7-
81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 n°2
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 nV2
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 sh
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 2-10-82 $1 Pt
13-24n-le (12-12-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 n1^
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 n2
nw* ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 8*6
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-21-82 $1 Pt
sw% nw%4 & Pt nw% sw% & Pt
sw% sw%4 & nw% nw% & neVi
nw% 24-24n-le (12-11-81)
Same to Same 1-12-82 $1 Pt
sw%4 nw% & Pt nw% sw% &
sw% sw%4 & nw% nw% 24-24n-le
(12-11-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 sh2
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 sh
nw% ne% 26-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 sh2
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 n
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 sh
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 sh
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 sh2
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 nV2
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-29-82 $1 nV2
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 1-20-82 $1 Pt
13-24n-le (12-14-81)
Same to Same 1-21-82 $1 se%
14-24n-le (1-7-82)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 na
sw% se% 23-24n-le (12-28-81)
Same to Same 2-1-82 $1 Pt Lt C
in Collier Add to Marland in
13-24n-1e (12-22-81)
Same to Same 1-21-82 $1 seY
14-24n-le (1-7-82)
Same to Same 12-29-81 $1 Blk
#1 Case Add to Marland in
14-24n-le (12-7-81)
Same to Same 1-21-82 $1 wh
sw% & Lts 1 thru 13 Blk 1& Lts 1
thru 15 Blk 4 in Collier Add to
Marland; Pt 13-24n-le (12-11-81)
Same to Same 1-12-82 $1 wH
sw% & Lts 1 thru 13 Blk1& Lts 1
thru 15 Blk 4 in Collier Add to
Marland 13-24n-le; Pt 13-24n-le;
Pt nw% 24-24n-le (12-12-81)
Same to Same 2-2-82 $1 Lts 1
thru 24 Blk 2 & sh of 1st Street;
eh of Antelope St.; nV Lincoln
St.; wh Main St; Collier Add to
Marland in 13-24n-le (12-31-81)
Dan Lloyd Trustee to Cactus
Energy Co. 2-23-82 $1 13.5% WI
sw% ne% ll-24n-2w (7-28-75)
Strata Explor Inc. to Jeffer-
son-Williams Energy Corp 3-5-
82 $10 ne% 9-22n-2w (1-21-82 et
al)
Don Fuhrman to May Petrol-
eum Inc. 2-26-82 $1 se% 21-21n-
2w (8-10-81)
Same to Same 2-10-82 $1 wh
ne% & se% ne% 28-21n-2w
(2-3-82)
Same to Same 2-11-82 $1 sh
nw% 27-21n-2w (2-3-82)
Same to Same 2-10-82 $1 se%
21-21n-2w (2-3-82)
Same to Same 2-12-82 $1 se%
21-21n-2w (2-2-82)
William Davis to Hirzel Inc.
et al 3-15-82 $1 Und 1/4 MI Lts 3
& 4 & sh nw% l-22n-lw (12-11-
81)
Assignment of Overriding
Royalty
Strate Explor Inc. to Donald
Blenderman dba Strata Re-
sources et al 3-18-82 $10 .25% of
8/8 ORRI Lts 3 & 4 & 5 & seY
nw% 6-21n-1w
Same to Strata Explor 3-19-82
$10 6.375% of 8/8 ne* ne%
20-22n-lw (9-30-81 et al)
Strata Explor to Donald Blen-
derman dba Strata Resources
et al 3-18-82 $10 Lts 3; 4;5& se%
nw% 6-21n-1w (10-10-80 et al)
Jefferson-Williams Energy
Corp to Revilo Explor Inc. 5-1-81
$10 ORRI of 3% of 8/8 sh nw%
2-21n-2w; nV2 nw% 2-21n-2w
(8-15-79 et al)
Jim Co. Oil & Gas Inc. to M.
D. Jirous 3-9-82 $10 Und 1/16 MI
ne% 8-21n-2w
Jefferson-Williams Energy
Corp to Lambert Voss et al
3-15-82 $10 Pt nw% se% 33-24n-le
(1-23-47)
Certification of Charter
Amendment Changing Name of
Company from R. L. Burns
Corp to Pyro Energy Corp
C. H. Arbaugh to The Public
3-3-82
Subordination Agreement
Fed. Ld Bk of Wichita to Neal-
Vaughan Energy Inc. 3-22-82 Lt
8 & sw% sw% 34-20n-1w
Mineral Deed
Kansas City Lutheran Home
HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Glomerulonephritis
By Lawrence Lamb. M.D. ly the nature of the kidney
damage and plan future
DEAR DR. LAMB — My treatment. Prednisone is
3-year-old granddaughter commonly used in the acute
started running a fever and stage and helps to cool down
the next day we took her to the inflammation in the
our doctor. He said she had a kidney. It sounds like your
sore throat and some nasal granddaughter has done well
congestion. Then her urine and is in good hands.
turned very dark and she I am sending you The
was admitted to the hospital Health Letter number 12-12,
with glomerulonephritis She Your Kidneys and How They
responded very well to her Work Others who want this
treatment of fluid restric- issue can send 75 cents with
tion, low sodium diet, antibi- a long, stamped, self-
otics and prednisone. addressed envelope for it to
She is home now but we me, in care of this newspa-
have some questions. The per, P.O. Box 1551, Radio
prednisone makes her hun- City Station, New York, NY
gry all the time The pedia- 10019.
trician said to let her eat DEAR DR. LAMB — I
because they don’t want her have heard so much against
getting upset and causing sugar from health fanatics
her blood pressure to go up that I would like to hear
The other concern is a kid- your views. What are the
ney biopsy. The two kidney effects of sugar on diges-
specialists and the pediatri- tion? Does it interfere with
cian say they may have to do the digestion and absorption
a biopsy to determine if her of protein, vitamins and
case is chronic. minerals when taken with
The swelling from her foods that contain these
eyes and legs and feet is nutrients? Can you become
gone and her chest is com- addicted to sugar’ Besides
pletely clear. We would obesity from too many calo-
appreciate any information ries will it cause other prob-
you have on this disease. lems (excluding dental
DEAR READER — It is caries)?
not a common disease DEAR READER - Car-
anymore It often follows a bohydrate foods are an
streptococcal throat infec- essential part of a balanced
tion. just as rheumatic fever diet and include fresh fruits
does. That is probably why and vegetables and cereals,
your granddaughter got The energy part of all these
antibiotics. basic foods comes from
The inflammation in the their content of glucose and
kidney is a complication and fructose. These are the same
allows albumin to leak out two single sugars, combined
of the filtered blood Some- together, that make up ordi-
times it also allows blood nary sugar. Table sugar is
cells to leak, causing bloody simple digested carbohy-
or dark urine. The loss of drate foods. The process,
albumin is why the swelling however, strips the food
occurs. source of vitamins, minerals
Normally the blood and, of course, bulk. It is
proteins, particularly albu- what sugar doesn ‘t have that
min. helps to draw fluid is harmful
back out of the tissues into Sugar is rapidly absorbed
the circulation When the because it is predigested
albumin is too low the fluid carbohydrate. That is often
stays in the tissues That harmful in diabetics and
caused the swelling of the those with reactive hypogly-
entire body including the cemia. That plus being a
face around the eyes. high-calorie food is the main
A kidney biopsy is often problem It is not addictive.
necessary to establish exact- (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Lutheran Wedding Rites
Are Wrong for Some
By Abigail Van Buren
e 1982 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: You were off base in your response to
"Lutheran Mother of Four Daughters" who wrote in support
of the pastor who refused to allow an obviously pregnant
bride to have "I’m Having His Baby" sung at her wedding.
Your answer: "A pregnant bride is also entitled to a
church wedding with a ‘soloist, fanfare, etc.’ if that’s what
she wants. It is not the pastor’s function to judge her. That’s
the Lord’s job.”
That answer might have been all right if you had
preceded it with: "In my opinion." As it stands, it is dead
wrong — at least in Lutheran practice.
Lutherans consider a church wedding a religious service
and have strict rules as to how it is to be conducted. No
secular music is allowed. There are rules on the types of
floral arrangements. A specific liturgy must be followed;
bride and groom may not prescribe their own rites, etc.
The Lutheran pastor is charged with seeing that these
rules are carried out and may refuse a church wedding to
those who insist on deviating from them. He may, in fact,
refuse to marry a couple if he feels they are not entering the
marriage in a right relationship. On the other hand, he may
perform a secular marriage for the couple at another
location if they choose not to abide with the church wedding
rules. -
So you see, a bride (pregnant or not) is not necessarily
entitled to a church wedding with a soloist, fanfare, etc., if
that’s what she wants — at least not in a Lutheran church. I
think you owe your readers a correction.
AN OHIO LUTHERAN
DEAR LUTHERAN: I do, and you provided the
evidence, for which I thank you, I stand corrected.
DEAR ABBY: I sit home about two nights a week while
my wife goes out to play tennis with her friends. Abby, there
is no way I could ever be interested in that sport.
I tell her she has no right to leave me alone, but she says
she has her own life to live and I should find something of
interest to do myself while she's playing tennis.
This argument is shaking our marriage. Who is right?
UNHAPPY
DEAR UNHAPPY: She is. Even though you are not
a tennis player, the ball is in your court!
MI n“2 se% 29-20n-1w; Und 1/2 nw% 15-20n-le; s1 nw% 15-20n-
MI seY 8-21n-lw
Release of Oil & Gas Lease
Mike Murphy to Henry Voise
Jr. 3-15-82 et nw% 10-21n-2e
(8-2-80)
Same to Same 3-15-82 sw%
10-21n-2e (8-2-80)
Assignment of Oil and Gas
Lease
Eric Olsen to Anadarko Ld &
& Hospital Assoc dba Trinity Explor Co. 3-10-82 $1 Pt sw%
Lutheran Hospital Assoc to nw%4 & Pt wh sw% 24-24n-le
Trinity Lutheran Hospital (11-19-81)
Foundation 3-15-82 $10 Und 1/640 T. S. Dudley Land Co. to And-
MI ne% 16-21n-2w; Und 1/320 over Oil Co. 3-3-82 $1 eV se’
MI sw% 33-22n-2w; Und 1/160 9-20n-le; Pt ne% 15-20n-le; Pt
Ie; Pt nV2 nw% 15-20n-le; nV
sw% 15-20n-le; nV sw% 28-20n-
Iw; nV2 se% 29-20n-1w; nw%
aka Lts 1 & 2; e% nw%
30-21n-le; ne% 23-21n-lw; sw%
24-21n-1w (4-23-81 et al)
Three Sands Oil Inc. to Pat-
rick Quirk 2-15-82 $1 15/23 MI sh
seX 8-20n-le (12-28-79)
Fred Day etaltoIGRM Inc.
2-26-82 $1 sw% 35-24n-2w
Robert Miller dba Panther
Drilling Co. to Cactus Energy
Co. 1-8-81 $1 ne% ll-24n-2w;
sw% 12-24n-2w (7-16-80)
DEAR ABBY: All those letters in your column about “the
missing silverware" apparently caused a twinge of con-
science in one of our past dinner guests.
My husband and I just received a package containing the
clipping of your column plus a knife, fork and spoon!
But here’s the kicker: It wasn’t our pattern!
STILL LAUGHING IN ST PETERSBURG, FLA.
CONFIDENTIAL TO HURTING: Give your grief a
chance to express itself. Cry your eyes out. Let
yourself go and let the tears flow. It’s healthy. Don't
try to put on a "brave" show. It takes honesty,
courage, strength and real manliness for a man to
express his emotions. The weak man hides.
gin tine
THE WOODWARD TORNADO OF 1947
Do you hate to write letters because you don’t know
what to say? Thank-you notes, sympathy letters,
congratulations, how to decline and accept invita-
tions and how to write an interesting letter are
included in Abby’s booklet, "How to Write Letters for
All Occasions." Send $2 and a long, stamped (37
cents), self-addressed envelope to: Abby, Letter
Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
By Roy P. Stewart
MIRRORSYESTERDAY
It was an ordinary city block
on West Main Street, this
enclave in Woodward on the
evening of April 9, 1947 In its
six houses lived 19 people, in
childhood, adolescence and
age, and one not yet born
Mrs. Guy Williams was
working on Eastern Star
records. Guy came into the
house after putting 110 baby
chicks in his garage, leaving
the car outside Next door
Mrs Tom Baker, being tired,
had gone to bed. Tom was ad-
miring his new set of golf
clubs.
Nearby Guy Smith locked
up and told his wife that he
was going to turn in Having
just done a washing, she put
damp clothes in the bathtub to
wait for the next day’s sun. At
a neighbor s, J L Craft and
his wife relaxed a bit, having
just come back from taking a
niece south of town
In a corner house Mrs. Mary
Shaefer tossed restlessly on
her bed, wearied from a re-
cent stroke Her daughter,
Mrs M. L Ralston, watched
her two-year-old daughter
playfully delay her bedtime
She thought, too, of another
child soon to arrive Ralston
was puttering around the
house
Marty Poage came in from
putting the Adams grocery
truck behind his house Mrs
Poage was doing some of the
housework that four active
children, aged from 4 to 17.
made necessary They were
engaged in various activities
about the house, one or two
listening to "Mr District At-
torney" on the radio, trying to
prove that good guys always
win
Then it happened The
almost constant breeze of the
high plains changed its tone. It
became louder, rougher, as
though trying to assert
supremacy over the elements
A pall of dust swept quickly
across the land, followed by
blinding rain, then hail,
sweeping as though fleeing
from unknown furies. The
noise grew deafening with a
frantic, howling sound; houses
shook and groaned; trees lash-
ed out in fury with their long,
knotted arms. a wall. The Ralstons had some
There was a blinding flash lacerations but no serious in-
of light, then chaos in sudden juries The six Poages, bat-
darkness An odd bodily feel- tered but not seriously in-
ing resulted from absence of jured. crawled about a blasted
oxygen as the storm sucked area larger than the original
air out to almost create a house size, seeking each other
vacuum Then complete All structures on the block
silence that nearly became were demolished Belongings
unbearable, after what had were scattered about but most
gone before in an instant of of them were lost These
time, yet seemed to last peoples’ lives were spared by
forever. some strange caprice of fate
Where the six houses stood that governs tornadic action
there was but a jumble of They were the lucky ones
wood and brick and stone About them in the city and
Pitiful scraps of clothing and nearby countryside the storm
bedding hung on shattered devil, with sudden callous
tree stumps The Williams' hands, had snatched the lives
car was atop the Baker house of 114 persons
rubble Some Buff Orpington
chicks, their natal fluff dirtied
from yellow to dark brown,
cheeped amidst wreckage of
the garage.
The truck lay overturned
many yards from the house in
which the Poages had lived.
The Bakers found each other's
hands after crawling in the
jumble of the only room not
completely devastated Mrs
Smith was located under a
bedraggled bed but the other
furniture was gone. Mr and
Mrs. Craft had clung to the kit-
chen sink for a time, before
J. L. wound up under the hot
water tank Surprising
herself, Mrs Craft lifted it off
of him.
Mrs. Shaefer was found on
the floor protected by an over
turned dresser up against half
Five Years Ago
Leroy Rolling was reelected
president of the Perry Kids Inc.
Ten Years Ago
Lonnie Farmer, Morrison, was
reelected secretary of the Okla-
homa Rural Water Associa-
tion...Steve Kime was selected
to serve as captain for the Perry
Maroon track team.
Twenty Years Ago
Karen Elwell was first place
winner in the fourth grade
division of the Perry Garden
clubs poster contest...Elaine
Mayes was elected president of
the Perry high school student
council.
Thirty Years Ago
Mrs. Eli Pricer was elected
president of the Perry Veterans
of Foreign Wars auxiliary...
Mrs. Bob Ewy was hostess to
members of the Junior Tuesday
at Two club.
Forty Years Ago
Miss Mary Schroeder began
duties as Farm Security Ad-
ministration home supervisor
for Noble county.
The Almanac
Fortieth in a sevent y five part series sponsored by the Oklahoma Heritage
Association as its contribution to the Diamond Jubilee Celebration.
0
By United Press International
Today is Saturday, March 27,
the 86th day of 1982 with 279 to
follow.
The moon is moving toward
its first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter
and Saturn.
There is no evening star.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
American publisher of prints,
Nathaniel Currier — of Currier
and Ives — was born March 27,
1813.
On this date in history:
In 1634, Leonard and George
Calvert, English colonists,
bought a tract of 30 acres on
the St. Charles River and
established what is now Mary-
land.
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev
replaced Nikolai Bulganin as
premier of the Soviet Union.
In 1964, an earthquake in
Alaska left 17 people dead and
damage estimated at $750
million.
In 1977, two Boeing 747 jets
collided and burst into flames
in the Canary Islands killing
577 people.
A thought for the day: U.S.
politician Wendell Willkie said,
"The Constitution does not
provide for first-and second-
class citizens.”
RESULT KIRBY’S
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 27, 1982, newspaper, March 27, 1982; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2253403/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.