The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 30, 1992 Page: 7 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
p. 7, Perry Daily Journal Tuesday, June 30. 1992
OPERATING A F IREWORKS stand as a fundraiser are members of the Perry high school cheerleading squad, left
to right, front row, Angie Shireman, Jenifer Stanley, Jenny Stanley, Sarah Dolezal and Melissa Boone; and second
row, Tina Betchan, Amy Chrz, Allison Martin, Candace Conrad, Sonya Myers and Carrie Stevens. Not pictured are
member Krystal Shireman and faculty sponsor Kathy Chrz. The fireworks stand, in operation daily through Saturday
is located on the east drive of the Perry Elks lodge. (Staff photo.)
Cheerleaders
Sell Fireworks
Perry high school cheerleaders for on the campus of Wichita State
1992-93 are operating a fireworks stand university.
on the east drive of the Perry Elks lodge. n .
Hours of operation will be 8:30 a.m to .Kathy Chrz is the faculty sponsor for
9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and the group. Members of the 1992-93 PHS
8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday. On Sat- cheerleading squad are Tina Betchan,
urday, July 4, the stand will be opened Amy Chrz and Carrie Stevens, sopho-
at 8:30 a.m. and continue operation as mores; Melissa Boone, Sarah Dolezal,
long as there are customers. Sonya Myers, Angie Shireman Jenifer
Funds raised from the sale of fire- Stanley and Jenny Stanley juniors- and
works will be used for expenses, includ- Candace Conrad, Allison Martin’ and
mg a cheerleader camp set for July 7-10 Krystal Shireman seniors
Information about the
great Perry community,
you won’t find anywhere
else, is contained each day
in your hometown newspa-
per, The Perry Daily Jour-
nal...Still your best bargain.
Weather
Temperatures for the 24-
hour period ending at 11
a.m. Tuesday.
12N.80 1 p.m. 82 2 p.m. 84
3 p.m. 84 4p.m. 86 5 p.m. 86
6 p.m. 90 7 p.m. 86 8 p.m.84
9 p.m. 84 10 p.m. 80 11 p.m. 78
12 M. 78 1a.m. 76 2 a.m. 74
3 a.m. 72 4 a.m. 72 5 a.m. 70
6 a.m. 70 7 a.m. 70 8 a.m. 72
9 a.m. 78 10 a.m. 82 11 a.m. 88
Forecast
Tonight: Clear with a low
from 68 to 73. South wind 5
to 15 mph. Wednesday: Sun-
ny with a high in the mid
90s. South wind 5 to 15 mph.
Fourth of July outlook:
Partly cloudy with a chance
of thunderstorms. High near
90.
Oklahoma extended fore-
cast for Thursday through
Saturday: Continued warm
and humid with a chance of
thunderstorms each day.
Highs Thursday and Friday
in the low to mid 90s, and
from the mid 80s in the Pan-
handle to tiie lower 90s in the
southeast on Saturday.
Lows from the mid 60s in the
Panhandle and northwest to
the mid 70s in the southeast.
Temperatures for the 24-
hour period ending at 11
a.m. Tuesday were: High
90, low 70. Temperatures for
the 24-hour period ending at
11 a.m. a year ago: High
100, low 82.
Announcements of en-
gagements, and a picture of
the individual or couple, will
be published in The Journal.
For details come in and talk
with our social editor.
To remove chewing gum from clothes, press ice cubes against the gum
until it become brittle and breaks off. Then use a spot remover to vanish
the last traces.
Hardware
dal
15 7th
• 77
While Supplies Last
. - 3
JULY 1992
ACE
Gorrily
Maxi/Mini Tuff Lites
Watertight, 100% rubber flashlights -
one 3 "D" cell for power, one 2 "AA”
cell for convenience Krypton bulb,
batteries included. 36501
YOUR CHOICE
• EA.
While Supplies Last
Insect Control
Effective insect control Choose Home
Fogger for Fleas, 6 oz., Wasp &
Hornet Killer, 15 oz.; Flying Insect
Killer, 12 oz.; Ant & Roach Killer,
16 oz.; 72673,72,75,76
Martha Gabriel
Resigns Post
Rainy Day Special
Drapes:
$1.00 per pleat unlined
$1.25 per pleat lined
Bedspreads & Comforters:
Full or Twin Size $8.00
Queen or King Size $12.50
(Ruffles are extra)
Mars Shine-A-Blind
Ultrasonic Blind Cleaning:
Each up to 5—$8.00
(Add $1.00 For Each Additional Ft.)
These prices good on customer take down & bring into
Northside.
On Site Ultrasonic Blind Cleaning Available
(Cash & Carry Only)
Servicing the Stillwater area with quality service
for over 25 years.
Special runs thru June.
PERRY CLEANERS
802 Fir
99
While Supplies Last
ACE
Hardware
897
While Supplies Last
Martha Herrmann Gabriel on Tuesday position with the Oklahoma State univer-
submitted her resignation to the board sity cooperative extension service,
of county commissioners effective Fri- She will do work headquartered at her
day, July 3. home northeast of Hennessey near
The commissioners accepted the resig- Bison. Her work will be to do research
nation with regret. She has served as No- for the extension service and some
ble county extension home economist writing. In her new position she will be
since May, 1987. an agent at large for the cooperative ex-
“I have enjoyed all my work in Noble tension service.
county whth 4-H club members and A successor in Noble county has not
homemakers,” she said. Beginning next been named. An appointment is expected
Monday, Mrs. Gabriel will begin a new late in the summer.
336-5322
NORTHSIDE CLEANERS
402 S. Main
Stillwater
NEW HOURS: Mon.-Frl. 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m.-Noon
372-0644
2 Gallon
Beverage Cooler
Great for picnics or on the job. Heavy
duty poly construction, with fast flow
faucet for pouring ease. 81426,82677
32 Gallon
Trash Can
Sturdy plastic can has snap lock cover
to secure rubbish Red or brown
71102,62
AS ADVERTISED ON NATIONAL T.V.
Some people will do anything
California Fears Damage
To Its Tourist Industry
By JOHN HORN dent of the Chamber of pecially bad time for the
Associated Press Writer Commerce in Palm Springs, state in general and South-
LOS ANGELES (AP) - near the earthquakes’ epi- ern California in particular.
Don’t mind riots? Gridlock? centers. “The riots were Almost every sector of the
Gang warfare? Smog? If bad, the recession was economy is troubled. De-
you still want to come here worse, and this will scare off fense and aerospace are
for vacation or business, the rest of them.” staggering, the computer in-
how do you feel about the Mayor Tom Bradley was dustry is in a slump, resi-
biggest earthquake in four quick to note that the quakes dential reaj estate is stag.
decades? were strongest 100 miles to nant, commercial real es-
No one can say for sure the east of downtown, tate and the construction in-
what the economic effect of “Let me make it clear to dustry are sorely depressed
the quakes will be on South- a national audience,” he and layoffs have hit banks’
ern California. But it’s clear said Sunday. “This earth- “I’m not sure that this
they won’t help. quake was not in Los An- particular event is operat-
"Basically, stability has geles. It was clear out in ing at the margins of impor-
been challenged,” Lynn Palm Springs. We don’t tance or is very significant,”
Reaser, chief economist at want people to confuse that said David Hensley, direc-
First Interstate Bank, said issue.” tor of the Business Forecast-
Monday. “Now there are too “Is this a good thing? ing Project at the Universi-
many question marks.” No,” said Michael Collins, ty of California at Los
No major visitor attrac- vice president of the Con- Angeles.
tions or hotels had any sig- vention and Visitors “The place has taken so
nificant physical damage. Bureau. “Is it going to hurt? many blows, I don’t know
Still, there may be financial probably. But not for long.” how the image can get any
damage to come. Earthquakes in California worse. You almost have to
“The greater fear is that are common, of course. But laugh over the series of bad
this will hurt the tourist the latest quakes, while hits we’ve taken.”
season,” said Rolfe Arn- causing relatively little The April riots are ex-
hym, executive vice presi- damage, arrived at an es- pected to cost the city $1.1
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
billion in lost visitor spend-
ing and 31,000 jobs over the
next year, according to the
Convention and Visitors
Bureau.
California is the world's
No. 1 travel destination,
with state tourism and trav-
el revenue of more than $52
billion a year, according to
the Office of Tourism.
After the riots but before
the quakes, Hensley predict-
ed local tourism would be off
21 percent this summer
compared with a year ago,
down 18 percent this fall and
off 14 percent this winter.
PKF Consulting estimat-
ed local tourism will drop an
additional 2 percent because
of the quakes.
to be a part of our group!
D KJ
DRIVER LICENSE
NUMBER’
OP 44123543 M
BIPTHSAT
02-21-
WI
f EXOAREST
e
170.5-9 BL
RICHARD R. SMITH
50 PRIME LANE
PERRY,OK. 73077
10-5-88597
//
— COMM
DEPT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
Group Travel Schedule:
Discoveryland - July 24
Nashville - Oct. 23-26
Will Rogers FOLLIES, OKC - Nov. 28
Member FDIC
1
Jo □
6th and Delaware • Perry, OK 7307 • 405-336-5531 • 405-336-3297 (FAX) • 405-336-2100 (INFOLINE)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 11 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 30, 1992, newspaper, June 30, 1992; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2256578/m1/7/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.