Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Oct. 29, 1970, edition 1 / Page 8
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Warren School MeHfc NOV. 2 - 6 VAUCMAN ELEMENTARY Monday - Hot dogs, plain beans, slaw, peach pie, roll, butter, raUk. Tuesday — Kalian spaghetti, stringbeans, whole buttered potatoes, rolls, butter, milk. Wednesday - Sausage patties, buttered grits, garden peas, applesauce, biscuits, butter, milk. Thursday - Hamburger country style, rice and gravy, buttered corn, cornbread, butter, milk. Friday - Ham biscuits, macaroni and cheese, peas and carrots, fresh apples, milk. NORLINA HIGH SCHOOL Monday — Hot dogs, French fries, slaw, apple pie, milk, buns. Tuesday — Turkey, dressing, cranberry sauce, stringbeans, gravy, chocolate cake, milk. Wednesday - Vegetable and beef soup, grilled cheese sandwiches, cinnamon buns, milk. Thursday - Ham biscuits, potato salad, stringbeans, peach cobbler, milk. Friday- Cheeseburgers, creamed potatoes, steamed cabbage, potato pie, milk. SOUTH WARREN Monday - Italian spaghetti, cabbage and carrot slaw, peach halves, hot rolls, butter, milk. Tuesday - Turketti, steamed cabbage, pineapples, hot rolls, butter, milk. Wednesday - Hot dogs, baked beans, Mexican cole slaw, fruited Jello, buns, butter, milk. Thursday — Beef and vegetable soup, peanut butter sandwiches, crackers, cinnamon buns with raisins, milk. Friday — Fried chicken, potato salad, green beans, hot rolls, butter,- milk, peach cobbler. JOHN GRAHAM SCHOOL Monday—Fish sticks, cornbread, butter, cole slaw, buttered potatoes, cookies, milk. Tuesday — Spaghetti with meat sauce, he* butter, turnip free lis, peach halves, milk. Wednesday - FrWd chicken, rice and gravy, hot Ms cults, butter, fax den peas, concealed fruit salad, milk. Thursday — Vegetable soup with beef, 1/2 peanut butter and Jelly sandwich, 1/2 pimento cheese sandwich, applesauce cake, milk. Friday — Hot dogs, rolls, beans, cole slaw, peach cobbler, mUk. NORTH WARREN Monday— Franks, slaw, meat sauce, buttered potatoes, rolls, cookies, milk. Tuesday—Turkey, dressing, gravy, strlngbeans, candled potatoes, rolls, milk. Wednesday — Bologna, rice pudding, broccoli, carrot and raisin salad, biscuits, milk. Thursday — Roast beef, gravy, creamed potatoes, mixed greens, rolls, cookies, milk. Friday — Franks, egg salad, steamed cabbage, sliced peaches, rolls, milk. LITTLETON HIGH Monday —Fish croquettes, creamed potatoes, strlngbeans, banana pudding, cornbread, milk, butter. Tuesday - Beef and vegetable soup, sandwiches, cinnamon buns, milk, butter. Wednesday—Hot dogs, slaw, navy beans, apricot pie, buns, milk, butter. Thursday — Spaghetti and meat sauce, tossed salad, garden peas, peaches, rolls, milk, butter. Friday— Hamburger In bun, slaw, candled yams, peanut butter delight, milk, butter. MACON ELEMENTARY Monday — Fish fillets, cole slaw, stewed corn, cornbread, applesauce cake, milk, butter. Tuesday—Meat balls with gravy, creamed potatoes, strlngbeans, hot biscuits, peaches, milk, butter. PERKINSON Receives MA Degree Hiram Perkinson, m, received the degree, Master of Arts from North Carolina State University after completing the degree requirements last Wednesday. A 1968 graduate of Atlantic Christian College, he is employed by the North Carolina Department of Correction, and Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Perkinson, Jr., of Norllna. Wednesday - Fried chicken, rice, gravy, garden peas with carrots, fruit Jello, milk, butter. Thursday — Beef and vegetable soup, crackers, peanut butter sandwich, cinnamon buns, milk, butter. Friday — Welners, rolls, cole slaw, navy beans, fruit cobbler, milk, butter. HAWKINS SCHOOL Monday — Sausage patties, buttered grits, turnip greens, hot rolls, butter, apple crisp, milk. Tuesday — Sloppy Joe, tossed salad, hamburger buns, peach cobbler, milk. Wednesday — Baked ham, candled yams, garden peas, hot rolls, butter, milk. Thursday — Baked beans and franks, cole slaw, apple pie, hot biscuits, butter, milk. Friday - Luncheon meat, buttered potatoes, steamed cabbage, pickled beets, hot rolls, butter, milk. NORTHSIDE Monday — Macaroni and cheese, tossed salad, hot rolls, butter, fresh apples, milk. Tuesday — Sloppy Joe burgers, whipped potatoes, cole slaw, school baked buns, sliced peacbM, milk. *• Wednesday — Baked ham, sweet potato fluff, garden peas, hot biscuits, butter, pineapple, milk. Thursday — Beef and vegetable soup, peanut butter and Jelly sandwiches, cocoanut cookies, milk. Friday — Fried chicken, peas and carrots, rice and gravy,hot biscuits, butter, apricots, milk. MARIAN BOYD Monday — Sliced bologna, lettuce and tomato salad, sesame seed buns, butter, sheet cake, milk. Tuesday—Spaghetti with meat sauce, turnip greens, cornbread, butter, cherry cobbler, milk. Wednesday — Fried chicken, rice, gravy, green beans, biscuits, butter, orange petals, milk. Thursday — Beef and vegetable stew, rolls, butter, purple plums, milk. Friday — Welners, navy beans, cole slaw, rolls, butter, pineapple upside-down cake, milk. Deaths And Funerals JOSEPH A. BOSS Funeral service* tor Joseph Alfred Rosa, Sr., 71, of Macon were held at 2:30 p. m. Saturday at Greenwood Cemetery by the Rev. Richard Parsons. Mr. Ross, a retired salesman tor Bryson Chevrolet Co., and retired farmer, died last Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Margaret Milam Ross; three sons, Joseph A. of Charlotte, John M. of Macon and Robert Ross of Oxford; two daughters, Mrs. Mary R. Bagby of Homestead, Fla., and Mrs. Peggy Ann Packmayr of Panama; a sister, Mrs. Clara Brlley of Gieenvllle; l7gran1chlldrenandone gre at- grandchildren. LOUIS NEWELL LITTLETON- Funeral services for Louis Newell, who died on Oct. 20 In the Roanoke Rapids Hospital, were held at St. Luke's Baptist Church with Rev. David Brinkley officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery. Survivors Include his wife, Mrs. Minnie Newell; four daughters, Mrs. Pattie Hall of Alexandria, Va., Mrs. Bertha James Robinson of Baltimore, Md., Miss Pearl Newell of Embro, and Mrs. Beulah Lasslter of Littleton; and one son, Louis Davis Newell of Warrenton. MRS. CORNELIUS SIMS BRYANT Funeral services for Mrs. Cornelia Sims Bryant, 72, of Route 2, Warrenton, were held Sunday at 2 p. m. at Coley Springs Baptist Church with the pastor, the Rev. James Coppedge, in charge. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mrs. Bryant dltii on Tuesday night of last week in Warren General Hospital where she had been a patient for some five weeks. She was born in Warren County on Jan. 6, 1897, the daughter of the late Henry and Ellen Sims. Her first marriage was to the late John B. Kearney. Surviving are her husband, Parks Bryant of the home; one daughter, Miss Mildred Kearney of Manhattan, N. Y.; one son, Curtis Kearney of Camden, N. J.; one step-daughter, Mrs. Bennle Moss of Warrenton; one step-son, Willie Bryant of New Jersey; four sisters, Miss Mattie Davis, Mrs. Luvenia Davis and Mrs. Sylvester Fields, all of Warren County and Mrs. Victoria Foster of Bronx, N. Y.; two brothers, Flemming Sims of Philadelphia, Pa., and Joseph Sims of Durham; two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. WILLIAM E. PEGRAM Funeral services for William Elmus Pefram, 62, retired farmer of the Cokesbury community of Vance County, were held Friday at 2 p.m. in Cokesbury Methodist Church by the pastor, the Rev. Larry Price, assisted by the Rev. Russell Bar bee, minister of Bethesda Baptist Church In Durham. Burial was In the church cemetery. Mr. Pegram died on Tuesday night, Oct. 20, at his home. He had been In ill health for the past several years. A native of Vance County, the son of the late Willie Gray Pegram and Mary Newman Pegram, he was born on Dec. 26, 1907. He was a member of the Cokesbury Church. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Lucy Harris Pegram; four daughters, Mrs. J. T. Abbott, Mrs. Charles Collier and Miss Peggy Pegram, all of Vance County, and Mrs. Eugene Floyd of Durham; four sons, William H., Wheeler, Gray and Jerry Pegram, all of Vance County; two sisters, Mrs. Clyde Pegram and Mrs. Alliene Abbott, both of Henderson; four brothers, W. G„ Leslie and Clarence Pegram, all of Vance County and Roy Pegram of Portsmouth, Va.; 17 grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. Mitchell Accepted At Tennessee College Clayton Charles Mitchell, Jr., of Division St., Norllna, has bnn accepted (or admission to Freed-Hardeman College, Henderson, Tenn., lor the (all semester of 1971. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton C. Mitchell, Sr. Mitchell attends NorllnaHlgh School and is planning to major In Pre-Enfteeertac while at Freed-Hardeman. He is a member at the Henderson Church of Christ. Freed-Hardeman College is a folly-accredited liberal arts Christian Jalor collect tamd«d la Henderson, Tenn., In lfc*. MRS. MARY DORTCH FLEMING Mrs. Fleming Honored On Her 98th. Birthday Mrs. Mary Dortch Flemlngof Norlina was honored at a birthday party at the Norlina Woman's Clubhouse on Sunday, Oct. 18. She was 98 years old on Oct. 21. She was presented a yellow chrysanthemum corsage and received many lovely gifts. The table bore a beautiful Norlina News (Continued from page 6) Prayer Group Meets With Mrs. Parham Mrs. Sara Parham was hostess to members of the Annie Armstrong Mission Prayer Group at her home on Monday yellow arrangement flanked by yellow candles. A threetiered birthday cake, cheese straws, nuts, mints and lime punch were served. Candelabra and floral arrangements adorned the Norllna Clubhouse. Approximately 300 guests were served during the gala occasion. evening. Mrs. Mary Lee Pridgen, leader, presided over the meeting and gave the devotional. The- program, "A Glorious Christmas," was presented by Mrs. Ann Mulchl. The meeting was closed with meditation and prayer. During the social hour the hostess served punch, pound cake and nuts. Mrs. P ridge n will entertain the group at the November meeting. Say you saw It advertised In The Warren Beoord. I ■ ii.' til i Honenakers Meet At Ho«e Mrs. HoHzium The Zlon Extension Homemakers Club bald lta October meeting at the home of Mrs. C. F. Holtzm an In RMgeway on Tuesday afternoon of last week. The devotional was led by the hostess who concluded the davotlonals with a reading, "Just For Today." Fund Raising Norllna High School has begun Its fund raising campaign for financing the school annual. The campaign consists of all the students participating and selling magazines. All funds derived from sales will be applied toward the cost of ihe annual, thereby reducing ♦he cost per copy to the" lowest pcsi'Me amount to the studuftla. > campaign, which beg< . on '.jet. 16, will run through Nov. 2. Many desirable prizes will be won by individual students and all cooperation from patrons will be greatly appreciated, according to the fund chairman. Mrs. Lily Harton (!«• aa interesting program on "What , Does Parenthood involve?" The club welcomed Mrs. MoUle Adcock as a visitor. During the social hour delicious refreshments were served by tbe hostess. f Homemakers Meet Mrs. K. G. Copley was hostess totheOakvllle Homemakers Club on Wednesday night of last week. Mrs. N. M. Milliard presided over the meeting which was opened with the singing of the United Nations Hymn. Mrs. L. R. Harris gave the devotional, speakingof facts and problems of the United Nations and what Christians can do to help. Mrs. Clifton Ellis read the minutes, called the roll and gave the treasurer's report. Mrs. L. R. Harris, Family Life Leader, gave the program. She gave some good suggestions on how to help solve family problems. ( The hostess served cookies, nut* and punch to the group. 1 mmmmmmmmmsgm mirnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm (Political Advert!aement) »>X VOTE THE MAN NOT THE PARTY WHY John J. Hawkins should be oloctod to Your County Board off Commissioners. Ask yourselves these questions. Iff your answers are yes, Then VOTE JOHN J. HAWKINS on Tuesday, November 3,1970. 1. DO YOU WANT FAIR EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES? 2. DO YOU WANT BETTER ROADS? 3. DO YOU WANT A MORE PROGRESSIVE FORM OF COUNTY GOVERNMENT FOR ALL CITIZENS? 4. DO YOU WANT RECREATIONAL FACILITIES FOR ALL CITIZENS? 5. DO YOU WANT BETTER LIBRARY FACILITIES? THIN VOTE JOHN J. HAWKINS, NOVEMBER 3,1970 1. A Native son (Warrenton, N. C.) 2. Veteran of two Wars (World War 2 and Korean War.) (A) Former Criminal Investigator with United States Army. 3. Recreation Specialist. 4. Job Corps Center Director. 5. Civil Service Retiree. 6. Sunday School Superintendent. 7. Former Organizer of Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. - 1 & •Si I I I ;8 6IYE THIS MAN A CHANCE TO BE ON YOUR SIDE. 6IYE HIM THE OPPORTUNITY TO SERVE ALL OF THE CITIZENS OF WARREN COUNTY. CAST YOUR BALLOT FOR JOHN J~ HAWKINS on Tuesday, November 3, 1970 AND WIN VJUD rom »t PRISMM AMD MJPPOirrtM OP JOHN J. HAWKINS
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1970, edition 1
8
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