Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Aug. 28, 1964, edition 1 / Page 2
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4-H PERSONALITIES?Delegates from War ren County to the 18th Annual 4-H Electric Congress held In Ashevtlle last week return home after being honored during the three day event. PlcturWabove are Miss Shirley Seaman from the Rldeeway 4-H Club; Mr. Johnny Hugh Davis from the Inez 4-H Club and Mr. Jimmy Hecht from the Rldgeway 4-H Club with the Assistant Home Economics Extension Agent, Miss Rita Castleberry. The Congress was sponsored by Carolina Power and Light Company, Duke Power Company, Virginia Electric and Power Com pany, N'antahala Power and Electric Com pany and N. C. Agricultural Extension Ser vice, and was held to honor outstanding 4-Hers In electric projects. Nancy Kaye Pittard Weds R. A. The Warrenton Presbyterlai Church was the setting heri Monday morning for the wed ding of Miss Nancy Kave Pit tard to Robert a. Vaughan The Rev. Lawrence Hardv o HARDWARE SPECIALS METAL WATER COOLERS 3 GaL ^ 9.95 METAL WATER COOLERS 10Gal 14.95 WOOD WATER COOLERS 10 Gal ^ 8.95 3*2 Gai. AIR SPRAYERS Compressed 7.95 8x10 TRUCK COVERS All sizes up to 15\20 at low prices. 7.95 POWER LAWN MOWER 22-Inch cut, 3 HP Briggs Stratton motor. Special 49.95 4(? ICE CREAM FREEZER White Mountain 12.95 4 Qt. ICE CREAM FREEZER Frost King 10.95 ZO-INCH WINDOW FAN Lasco Electric Reversibli -5 Year guarantee 29.95 All varieties of Turnip & Salad Greens Bring us your heaters to bt relined and repaired at special low summer prices, IRONING BOARD Arvin adjustable all metal 4.95 Arvin Deluxe model, IRONING BOARD 4 leg all metal 6.9! Favorite CLOTHES DRYER Indoor or outdoor use Special |.4 ? SHOP-N-SAVE LANIER Hardware Co. ' ; ? Everything la Hardware Phone 257-3215 ?p.'. We Deliver Warreatoa, N. C. Pembroke, N. C. and trie Rev. James Grant performed the ceremony. Music was furnished by Miss Jennie Lou Thomai of Ellerbe, N. C. The bride is the daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Plttard of Warrenton and the bride groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mason Vaughan of Pu laski, Va. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a white silk shantung tailored suit Her veil was attached to a bow of the same material. She car ried a prayer book topped with a white orchid. Mrs. Dan Knight of Rocky Mount was her sister's only attendant. She wore a pink silk shantung tailored suit with matching bow headpiece. She tarried a nosegay of white pom poms. Mr. Vaughan was his son's aest man and ushers wern Rob art Plttard, brother of thebride, and Mason Vaughan, Jr., brother of the bridegroom. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Plttard wore a navy blue suit and matching accessories. Her shoulder corsage was an jrchid. Mrs. Vaughan, mother of the bridegroom, wore an olive green dress with satin trim med portrait neckline with matching accessories and an orchid corsage. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan left i immediately following the cere i mony for their new home in Walford, Maryland,?Both will teach in the public schools in | Clinton, Md. this fall. The bride Is a graduate of ! St. Andrews Presbyterian Col | lege InLaurinburg, N. C., where ] whe served as a Senior Mar j shall and was a member of I the Honor Society. The bridegroom is a graduate j of Pembroke State Teacher's College in Pembroke, N. C. Out-of-town guests attending I the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Mason Vaughan and daughter, Cynthia Jane, Mrs. Vaughan's mother, Mrs. White, all of Pu laski, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ma son Vaughan, Jr., and family of Lebanon, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Sam Mayberry of Front Royal, Va.; Mr. and Mrs, S. R. Jen kins of Roanoke Rapids, Mrs. N. L. Jenkins of Lacrosse, Va., 1 Mrs. Mamie Fimple, Mrs. IJ. | R. Jenkins, and Mr. and Mrs. | Charlie Jenkins, all of Little I ton; Miss Dorothy Grimm of Al | exandrla, Va.; Miss Betty Sue | Murphy of Willlard and Mr. Bill McMillan of Red Springs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Allen and | children of Washington, D. C. | were visitors here and in Palmer Springs, Va.,duringthe I weekend. WE HAVE COTTON DEFOILANT A complete line of all seeds that may be purchased on A.S.C. orders. CRIMSON CLOVER LADINO CLOVER FESCUE GRASSES ORCHARD GRASS LIME and FERTILIZERS OATS-BARLEY We have specialized in furnishing seed for pastures, lawns and green manure crops for twenty years Please give us an opportunity to serve you. Warrenfon Supply Co. Phone 257-3138 WARRINTON, N. C. What's new? Valmalne is the name of a new variety of re malne which has high re sistance to downy mildew, a fungus disease. This new va riety was developed by the Agricultural Research Service, USDA, In cooperation with the Texas Experiment Station. Good yield and quality tests have been reported. It Is also recommended for other areas where remalne Is grown Readers In New Hanover and other eastern counties, may wish to try this new variety. Keep these two varieties of lettuce in mind for a spring or fall crop in 1965. The varie ties are Summer Bibb and But tercrunch. Both varieties are adopted to all sections of the state and are especially desirable for home gardens and local markets where a high quality product is desired. They are more re sistant to hot, dry weather than sther lettuce types. Mechanical harvesting of blueberries is proving to be a bractlcal method of reducing abor during the harvest season. The device consists of two rotating spindles mounted on a frame. Each spindle has 160 vibrating fingers which shake :he mature berries from the slants. Experienced hand pickers aarvest less than one-half acre sf berries in an 8-hour period. ! I In contrast, the machine, oper ! ated by three people, can har vest over one-half acre of ber I rles in one hour. Bruising of apples during grading and packaging opera tions has been reduced to a minimum. This has been made possible by refinements In rae j chanical handling of fruit dur | ing harvest. Many growers are now using t 20-bushel bulk boxes for trans porting fruit from the orchard i to the pack shed. This eliminates the use of a large I number of smaller bushel field j crates formerly used for this i purpose. The larger boxes are loaded on trucks by either fork lifts, or a crane device, which works better In steep orchard sites. You are perhaps wonder ing how a 20-bushel box of apples can be dumped, without bruising the fruit, when It reaches the grader. Instead of dumping the fruit In a wooden hopper, it Is dump ed into a large tank containing water. The apples float out and are picked up by a carrier belt, or rollers, which moves them to the grading equipment. The brushy Mountain Apple Grower's Coop. Is installing modern equipment In a new building at Moravian Falls. If you are In this neighborhood, you may wish to drop by this fall and see the equipment in operation. Hamburger Invented At The St. Louis Fair Washington ? An enterpris ing chef at the St. Louis World's Fair of 1904 Introduced a new delicacy; beAf chopped, broiled, and served on a bun. The cook's name Is lost to history but not his Invention: the hamburger. A national In stitution along with baseball and bubble gum, the hamburger Is enjoyed at the rate of some 21 billion a year or an aver age of 110 for every man, wo man, and child. ROLLED OR FLOATED Chopped beef, on or off Its bun, is a versatile, year-round favorite, the National Geogra phic says. It Is slapped Into patties, rolled In balls, molded Into loaves, stuffed In leaves, floated In soup, fried, broiled, barbecued, braised, and serv ed on brochette. In addition to the familiar hamburger and cheeseburger, there are such exotic derlva tles as pizzaburgers, pickle burgers, bagelburgers, banana burgers, wlneburgers, nutbur gers, onlonburgers, soybean burgers, lobsterburgers, Texas?, California?, and Da nlshburgers. In fact, almost any food that can be chopped and cooked will sooner or later turn up on a menu as a "burger. In Washington, D. C., to pub licize a theatrical production, a bakery aind meat company realized a hungry boy's dream recently when they combined talents to produce the world's largest hamburger; 20 pounds of beef, 5 pounds of tomatoes, 10 heads of lettuce, a gallon of mustard , and 5 pounds of onions. The roll was 12 feet around. The genuine American ham burger has Invaded foreign soil, but not without opposition. Despite predictions of finan cial suicide, a courageous American company recently opened a chain of hamburger stands In, of all places, Paris. Gourmets in the mecca of gas tronomy claimed that ground meat should only be bought for pets. A virologist at the Pas teur Institute called "Om Bourzhays" sheer poison. He said millions of germs were ground Into the meat by the chopping machines and left to multiply even under heat. Sales plummeted until one hambur ger devotee pointed out: "Americans eat millions of hamburgers a month, and they seem to be doing fine." Hamburger eateries In Parla now do a booming business, and most of the customers are French. ORIGINATED IN BALTIC Though appreciation of the hamburger came late to France, regions of Europe savored chopped beef centuries ago. According to gastronomes, the first version of the ham burger turned up on medieval menus In Baltic states. People often ate raw beef shredded with a dull knife. Merchants from Hamburg, the German port and leading mi! Tiber of the Hanseatlc Lea gue, brought It home at Steak Tartar. German emigrants to the United States brought this raw speciality, soon nicknam ed hamburger though It had yet to be broiled. In World War I, when anti Germany feeling ran high, ham burger was sometimes called "Salisbury steak." The name | honored Dr. James H. Salis bury, a 19th-century British nutritionist who went patent medicines one better. He claim ed his diet of ground beef and clear tea relieved pernicious anemia, asthma, bronchitis, co litis, rheumatism, pulmonary tuberculosis, gout, and harden ing of the arteries. Marriage Licenses Bernlce Nance, colored, of Washington, D. C., to Jordan Kearney of Norfolk, Va. Betty Alleen Bobbitt, white, of Littleton to George Walter Robinson, Jr., of Warrenton. Barbara Jean Powell, color ed, of Macon to Willie Lewis Jlggetts of Macon. Verterlean McGee, colored, of Whltakers to Theodore i Speight of Whltakers. Magalene Rudd, colored, of1 Holllster to Clinton Johnson of Holllster. Linda Joyce Adams, white, of Raleigh to Jerry Monroe Barnes of Raleigh. Nancy Kaye Pittard, white, of Warrenton to Robert Allen Vau ghan of Pulaski, Va. Vonclel Napier, colored, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., to Brant Perry of Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Karla R. Hellmann, white, of Perkasle, Pa., to Alan M. Wels berg of Southampton, Pa. ATTEND WEDDING Mrs. R. B. Butler, Mrs. J. E. Adams and houseguests, Mesdames C. W. Chllders, and J. E. Cooke, of Richmond, Va., spent the weekend In Greens boro and attended the wedding of their cousin, Miss Margu erite Ann Waters, and Mr. Lucian Cox Jones in Grace Methodist Church on Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock. Mrs. Ersle B. Stewart haj returned after spending amontl at Lake Junaluska. Misses Betty Rogers am Dorothy Smith of Durham spen last week here with Mr. am Mrs. P. B. Rogers and family Miss Kate White Williams 1 visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. W Alston in Inez. Mrs. A. J. Schmltt of Eng Lehard Is a guest of Mrs. Mar W. Shields. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hedge path and daughter, Charlean, o Jacksonville, Fla., are guest of Mrs. W. R. Hedgepeth. The; all visited Dr. and Mrs. A. W Hedgepeth and family in Pine tops this week. Brig. Gen. and Mrs. W. T Pitts of AshOTille are gueet. if Misses Sarah and Betty Jeai Pitts. Group Of Friends Leave The County An Integrated group of College Students, sent to War-" ronton by the Friends Society of the Quaker Church on an educational mission, left War renton during the past weekend. The group, under the direc tion of Mr. and Mrs. Watson S. Mason, Jr., had been dom iciled In an apartment over Brown's Superette on Franklin Street In Warrenton for the past six weeks. During their stay here they conducted a num j ber of workshops on voter reg I lstratlon, remedial studies and I adult education as well as taking part in such activities as clean ing up church grounds and work ing in the fields of colored | farmers. The group, Invited here by the j I Warren County Chapter of the! | NAACP, became quite contro-j versal and were at times the' I targets of Ku Klux Klan har-' j rassment, but In the last twoj ! weeks they seemed to have' been accepted, at least to th^t point that there was little open] hostility expressed, and where] I there seemed to have beenj growing understanding of their ' objectives. Robinson Promoted In Chemstrand Firm DURHAM- H. M. Robinson, Jr., has been promoted to re search chemist at Chemstrand Research Center, according to an announcement by Dr. G. B. Hughey, director of products research. Robinson was born In Hender son, and graduated from North Carolina State In 1955. He then joined Chemstrand Research \ at Decatur, Ala. He moved with ! the Research Center to itspres ent location In North Carolina] and Is now assigned work on i the polyester finish group. He has served In quarter-j master corps of the Army and! now resides In Cary. Robinson's parents are na-l tives of Warren County. His] father Is the son of the late Mrs. Pannle Robinson of Nor llna, and his mother Is theform er Miss Mary Burgess Kimball, daughter of the late Mr. and] Mrs. W. W. Kimball of Drewry. Electrically conductive fa brics are being made by coat ing textiles with a conductlvi polymer. They may be cut ant stitched and used in electrlt blankets, heating pads, heatet clothing or pipe heaters. Point Of View Two men were arguing about which had the dumbest office boy. "I Just gave ~ftiy office-boy $5 and told him to go out and buy me a Cadillac, and he went without question," one said. "He's a genius compared to my boy," said the second. "I asked him to go out to the country club to see if I was there, and he's on his way!" Meanwhile, the two boys met. "Boy, Is my boss dumb," said one. "The big stupe Just gave me $5 to buy him a Cad illac and he didn't even say what color." "That's nothing," said the other boy. "My bos? Just told me to go out to the country club to see If he's there and all the time the phone was right in front of him. Ho could of called and asked." LAST STOP A woman slipped on a sta tlon_ escalator and started to 1 tumble down to the bottom. Half way down she collided with a man. Knocking him down, and the two continued downwards to gether. After they had reached the bottom the woman, still dazed, continued to sit on the man's chest. Looking at her he said politely: "I'm sorry, madam, but this Is as far as I go." Mr. William P. Conn left {Sunday for New York after vlslt Jing his mother, Mrs. W. P. [Conn, and other relatives here. ;Mrs. Conn left on Tuesday for |Mlaml, Fla., to visit her daugh ter, Mrs. W. L. Stevenson, and jfamlly, for ten days. TIME FOR FALL PUNTING Let Us Fill Your A.S.C. ORDERS FOR FALL GRAINS BARLEY OATS ABRUZZI RYE FESCUE LADINO CLOVER SEED and FERTILIZER WARREN FCX WARRENTON, NORTH CAROLINA WE TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING The addition of the ZENITH T.V. Handcrafted 1 |WtU FOR GREATER DEPENDABILITY NO PRINTED CIRCUITS NO PRODUCTION SHORTCUTS Don 't compromise with quality Zenith handcrafted quality makes the The CRESTLAKE . Model M2705 U \\ / Trim, compact styled metal cabinet P^f'OrmdnCB in Maroon color and Ebony color. + ^ Hiffpronro New Zenith Deluxe Video Range 50 N-Cv OUterenCe 82-Channel Tuning System 21.000 Lm Volts Picture Power. Big 6V4" x 214 zenith Quality Speaker. , weekly after small down payment The LOIRE . Model M2708 U Elegant, trim, compact styled metal cabinet in grained Walnut color or Rrained Mahogany color, lew Zenith Deluxe Video Range 82-Channel Tuning System. flft 21.000 Volts Picture Power. ' / wu Big 6>A" x 2V4" Speaker. VHF ? ? Spotlite Dial. Dipole Antenna. Weekly on portable RADIO TV CENTER SALES A SERVICE J. ALLEN TUCKER C. B. MILLER PHONE: 257-3668 WARRENTON. N. C.
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1964, edition 1
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