Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Sept. 8, 1982, edition 1 / Page 6
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News and Events of Interest To Norlina Readers Phone 456-3329 To Include Items On This Page Mrs. Mildred Wilson and Mrs. Lucille Sat terwhite were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John Allen and Heather last week at Carolina Beach. Mrs. Allen underwent surgery at New Hanover Hospital in Wilmington on Friday. Mrs. Betsy Souther land of Henderson visit ed Mrs. Selma Rooker over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. John Rooker, Amy and Valerie of Burlington visited Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Rooker and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Brantley over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Buster Dishmon of LaCross, Va. spent several days during the I^abor Day weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Baker, Beth and Norwood. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis and Mrs. F. D. Draffin visited Mr. and Mrs. John Clarke at Emerald Isle over the weekend. They cele brated the Clarke's golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Perkinson of Wendell visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Egerton and Mrs. Betsy Pace over the weekend. Mrs. Mary Eliza Byrd and Mrs. Viola Elliott spent Friday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Norwood. Mr. and Mrs. 0. R. Baker spent Sunday in High Point. Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Mustian spent the weekend in Del Haven, N.J. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hankla, David and Mark Ken of Atlanta, Ga. visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis, over the holidays. David Perkinson and Bill of Cary spent the weekend with Mrs. Gladys Perkinson. Join ing them on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. John Perkinson of Raleigh. Thomas Harp of New port News, Va., visited his mother, Mrs. Onnie Harp who celebrated her 92nd birthday on Monday. Mrs. Paige Perkinson and Mrs. Boyd Wilson of Aylmer, Ontario were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hendrick in Char lotte last week. While en route home, Mrs. Per kinson and Mrs. Wilson were overnight guests of Mrs. Kenneth Henderson in Durham on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Clarke were honored by their children, Mr. and Mrs. John P. Clarke of Chesterfield, Mo. and Mr. and Mrs. Braxton E. Barrett, Jr. of Wyek off, N. J., on the occa sion of their 50th wedding anniversary. Also attending the celebration on August 31 at the Ramada Inn in Atlantic Beach were Mrs. Martha Draffin and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis of Norlina and Sarah Joy Barrett and Braxton Earl Barrett, III of Wyekoff, N. J. Birth Mr. and Mrs. Danny Bolton of Norlina an nounce the birth of a son, Michael Thomas, on August 29. The infant weighed eight pounds, three and one-half ounces. Mrs. Bolton is the former Jeanne Moseley of Norlina. Grandparents are Mrs. Irene Bolton and the late M. T. Bolton and Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Moseley, all of Norlina. Take Two Aspirin and Rattle These Bones Old Indian medicine cures used by natives along the South Texas border are often European in origin. Many folk medicines used among the rural people of Texas and Mexico have been hand ed down from generation to generation but now have been traced to Spanish or Portuguese explorers and settlers. Money Saver To operate range or over economically, use only as much heat as necessary for cooking jobs. Turn range units off three minutes and oven units off 15 to 30 min utes before end of cooking time. Taste Treat Dill seed is delicious spr inkled on potatoes, cole slaw and macaroni. LAKE GASTON RESORT (FORMERLY DELBRIDGES) Proudly Presents the "CONTINENTALS" EVERY SAT. NIGHT 9 til 1 at the famous COUNTRY MUSIC LODGE GASBURG. VA. "Done* to the music of tho moct versatile band in this aroa." Knight's Appfiance ft TV Center Parts Depart. Do It Yourself And Save Money See Us For Appliance Pert* ■nuine 6. E. Pais And Parts Fer Many Other Brandt * BAKE t BROIL ELEMENTS SURFACE UMTS See Jewel Or Lee* Knight At 'S APPLIANCE NORMA R. C. MIOIVCOITa G1LEND4? Volunteer Firemen Plan Stew The Ridgeway Volunteer Fire Department will sponsor a stew sale at the Ridgeway cantaloupe shed at 11 a. m. on Saturday, September 11. Cost is $3 per quart, or $2.75 per quart if you provide the container. First Band Practice Slated The Norlina Senior Social Club will hold its first fall band practice on Wednesday, September 29 at 10 a. m. under the direction of the Rev. Steve Gandy at Norlina Baptist Church. All members are urged to attend. Ladies Auxiliary To Gather The Warrenton Rural Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary ("Blazetts") will meet in the home of Mrs. Juanita Wood on Tuesday, September 14 at 8 p. m. All members are urged to attend. Hot Dog Sale Is Scheduled The Ladies Bible Class of the Warrenton Church of God will sponsor a hot dog sale on Saturday, September 11, from 10 a. m. until 5 p. m. in the fellowship hall of the church. There will also be a carwash at the church beginning at 8 a. m. Spaghetti Supper Is Slated Warren Academy PTO will sponsor a spaghetti supper at the Warrenton Lions Den on Sunday, September 12, from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The cost is $3.50 for spaghetti with homemade sauce, salad bar, dessert, and beverage. Doll Show Planned At Norlina There will be a doll show at the Norlina United Methodist Church on Saturday, September 18, from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Over 100 dolls dating from the 1830s will be on display in the basement of the church. Admission will be $1. There will also be a yard sale, a bake sale, and a sale of crafts and homemade items along with the doll show. Moseley Family To Gather The descendants of the Andrew Moaeley family will have their annual family reunion on Sunday, September 12, at the Old Wise School. Friends and relatives are invited to come and bring a picnic lunch. The meal will begin at 1 o'clock. Nursery, Kindergarten Ready Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Warrenton will have a nursery and kindergarten available on Sundays at 11 a. m. beginning Sunday, September 12. Color Portraits Available Regal Studios of Henderson will have a limited offer on a 10X13 family color portrait at Warrenton Pentecostal Holiness Church on September 18. For a cost of $7.95, one portrait will be made per family. The cost will include mounting in a wooden frame. Interested families should contact Betty Fleming at 257-2079 from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m., or 257-2718 after 6 p. m., or be at the church between 10 a. m. and 8 p. m. on September 18 to be photographed. Homecoming Services Planned Warrenton Pentecostal Holiness Church will have homecoming services on Sunday, September 12. The guest speaker will be the conference superin tendent, the Rev. J. Dover Lee, from Falcon. Services will begin with Sunday School at 10 a. m. followed by homecoming service at 11 a. m. and lunch at 1 p. m. A special singing service will begin at 2 p. m. The public is cordially invited. Warren PTA Meeting Scheduled The Warren County PTA will meet Saturday, September 25, at 6 p. m. at the Olive Grove Club house. Littleton News Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Harris and house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Oreshack and son, Craig, of Raleigh were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Harris in Areola. Mrs. Sula Hardy Morris tripped over a vacuum cleaner last week and broke her pelvis. She is now home recuperating. Tommy Young was a recent surgery patient in Duke University Med ical Center in Durham. Mrs. G. L. Summer of Como spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. T. I. Pepper. On Saturday Mrs. Summer, Mrs. Pepper and Mrs. A. P. Farmer visited the Rev. and Mrs. David E. Bobbitt at the Baptist home in Winston-Salem. Mrs. Joe Threewitts and granddaughter, Nicole Carter, Mrs. Mildred Oxenham and Kelly Livingston were visitors of Mrs. Margaret T. House in Pines Rest Home in Louisburg Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Riggan, Jr. of Spring Valley, N. Y. spent several days last week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Macon Moore, Jr. and Miss Fannie Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Riggan, Jr. of Spring Valley, N. Y. and Mrs. Mario Rossell and Mrs. Pattie Edwards of Hen derson were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Nannie Inscoe and Mrs. Hazel Pitt Sunday. The Riggans returned to their home Monday. Mrs. Forest Cheek, Jr. and daughter, Denise, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Willie SykesSunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Riggan, Jr. of Spring Valley, N. Y. were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riggan. Mrs. Robert Salmon is a patient in Halifax Me morial Hospital. Mrs. Dorothy Stans bury and Mrs. J. Clement Pegram and Mrs. Maggie Pearce were in Durham Monday. Mrs. Ellen Moseley and Mrs. Owen G.' Shearin of Warrenton were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Gladys Stansbury. Mrs. Claude Lynch of Roanoke Rapids visited Mrs. Stansbury Wed nesday and Mrs. Ben U. Allen of Henderson was also a visitor of Mrs. Stansbury on Wednes day. Mrs. Jackie Buff aloe and Mrs. William Buf faloe, Sr. accompanied Mrs. Ann Smith Adkins to her home in Bruud nax, Va., Monday after having spent some time with Mrs. W. B. Adkins. They also visited Mrs. Be mice West and Mrs. Claude P. Pike while here. Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Greenspan of Silver Springs, Md., spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. (Dick) Fuggitt. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. McLawhorn and Douglas McLawhorn of Glen Allen, Va., were Tuesday guests of the Fugitts. Mr. and Mrs. William Buffaloe and children, Jeffrey and Angie, of Greenville were visitors of Mrs. William Buffaloe, Sr., and Mrs. Selma Bobbitt. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Threewitts spent the weekend in Golds boro with Mr. and Mrs. Vinson Carter. Their granddaughter, Nicole returned home after spending last week with Mr. and Mrs. Three witts. Take Good Look If Stuck For Gift If you're stuck for a good, unusual gift for someone special, take a good look around your own home. Gifts of family heirlooms such as old books, cookbooks, sheet music, quilts or other handiwork, or even furniture, will be greatly appreciated by those close to you, says Dr. Thelma Hinson, extension family resource management specialist at North Carolina State University. This is a particularly good gift-gitfng idea for older persons, perhaps on fixed incomes, who can distribute some of the things they've collected through the years. Inheritance taxes can be avoided and the valuable or sentimental object will go to someone you know will appreciate and care for it. Not-So-Eager Contrary to popular belief, some beavers are careless dam builders and not very eager, the National Geogra phic Society says. A few old beavers without mates make only halfhearted attempts at dam-building and build structures that look as though the material had drifted there. MRS. MARTIN LOUIS BOLT Miss Bloomer Weds M. L. 'Rusty' Bolt Gail Ann Bloomer of ^edar Grove, N. J. and 4artin Louis (Rusty) Jolt of Littleton were jnited in marriage Saturday, August 21, at 3 )• m. in the Old First Church in Cedar Grove, J. with the Rev. Richard Clayton offici ating. The bride is the laughter of Mr. and Vfrs. Walter Bloomer of Sedar Grove, N. J. The jroom is the son of Mrs. Ethel Gordon of Littleton and Eugene Bolt of Louisburg. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of chiffon and Aiencon lace with a Queen Anne neckline and sheer, full, bishop sleeves with lace appli ques and beads. The skirt was three tiers of lace and appliques and featured a chapel train. Her veil was illusion, lace, and net with a floor-length train. Virginia Aicklin of Cedar Grove, N. J. was maid of honor. Brides maids were her sisters, Lisa Bloomer of Cedar Grove and Linda Schneider of Vernon, N. J., Linda Ryder of Lit tleton, sister of the groom, Tina Esposito of Cedar Grove, N. J., and Karen Dembowski of Fairfield, N.J. Heather Douma of Hamburg, N. J., cousin of the bride, was flower girl. Eugene Bolt was his son's best man. Ushers were Butch Bolt of lit tleton, brother of the groom, Michael Wil liams of Macon, Kerry Nixon of Littleton, Mark Schneider of Vernon, N. J., and Ed Bengle of Cedar Grove, N. J. Jarman Ryder of Lit tleton, nephew of the groom, was ring bearer. A reception was held at the Hanover Manor in East Hanover, N. J. After-Rehearsal Party An after-rehearsal outdoor party was held at the home of the bride's paternal grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bloomer. At tending were members of the bridal party and guests from North Caro lina. Health Hazard People who have exper enced job troubles or finan :ial setbacks are nearly twice is likely to be ill or injured ind more than twice as like y to report psychological symptoms than those not sxperiencing such events. Furthermore, members of the middle class appear to be most vulnerable to these undesirable events when the economy takes a turn for the worse. The elephant seal often snores to amuse himself. While partly submerged in ui isolated tide pool, he may snore in a manner that sug gests singing in a bathtub. Salted The word "sausage" is derived from the Latin "salsus", meaning salted.
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Sept. 8, 1982, edition 1
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