The Billings News (Billings, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1983 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Billings News and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Melanie Ibara-Monte Moss
Many in Billings Church
o scw. ec.
. A
■ Melanie L. bara and Monte Attending the couple were his
E. Moss exchanged double ring sister and brother-in-law, Lida
wedding vows at 7 p.m. Oct 14 and Doug Beckwith.
in First Christian Church, Bill- A reception was held in Fell.
IeS. The Rev. Cal Kennedy off owship Hall following the cere,
ielated . mony attended by relatives and
Parents of the couple are Dor- friends.
othy M. Emeterio ofGardena, CA After a wedding trip to Okla,
and Melvin O. Boling, Wichita, City the couple has established
XS and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moss of their home in Enid,
Billings,
LEGAL SERVICES
AVAILABLE TO
MR., MRS. MONTE MOSS
HONORED AT SHOWER
Mr. and Mrs. Monte E. Moss SENIOR CITIZENS
were honored with a wedding
shower Nov. 1 in Fellowship Hall
Legal services are available
_ . to all senior citizens, regard,
of Billings Christian Church, less of their income level, in the
Hostesses were Mrs. Andrea NODA 8-County area of Alfalfa,
McCluskey, Betty Hayton, La- Blaine, Garfield, Grant, Kay
Vine Sheffer, Dorothy Tipps, Kinofisher Maior Noble
T indo Souder Degrow Camnm Mule Major ano Noble
Linda Snyder, Peggy Gumm, counties through the Legal Ald
Jeanette Olbert andCarol Wilkins, of Western Oklhoma's Law Re-
Those attending or sending ferral Program
gifts, other than the hostesses, Services provided include civil
were Eunice Schultz, Macke Hu- law, medicaid, Social Security,
ter. Opal Moss, Sara Yost, And tenant-landlord conflicts, and
rea and Leisle Wilkins, Trina legislative, administrative and
Snyder, Debbie Hayton, Celes- judicial representation as well
Pittman.6' Jean Manley, Donna as other types of legal guidance.
Petman, Frances Moss, Dottie These services are also avail-
Kiazlar, Flossie Gerken, Karen able to older persons residing
Sparks, Lida Beckwith, DonAnn in long-term care facilities.
Bellmon, Bertha Hostetler, Tone Mary Ford, Paralegal, is the
Combrink, Katherine Ward, Edna Legal Aid of Western Oklahoma
Schultz, Wynona McNeely, Vicki representative in the NODA area
Waggoner, Louise Britton, Becky and she can be reached at 224
Hammock, Carla Duroy, La Vara N. independence, Suite 624, Enid
Gregory and Helen Moss. OK 737301 or at 233-4501,
FIRST GRADE NEWS
April Pittman hada birthday on
on Friday. It sure was fon. We bad
cupcakes, punch and a balloon
racer Thank you Mrs. Pittman,
a busy day. We went with the 2nd
and 3rd graders to the Fairchild
Center to sing our Halloween
songs for them. We always enjoy
the bus ride and the residents
are such a good audience. They
even gave all of us a sack of
candy when we finished singing.
First grade mothers who hel-
ped with our party at school were
Peggy Failing, Gina Sharp and
Theresa Pittman. Many thanks
for the treats and party favors
provided!
This Monday was a double
birthday party. Our twins, Josh
and Jenny Falling were 7 and
their mom, Peggy, came with
double cupcakes and lots of
goodies, crazy straws and
Cokes!! We played the balloon
race again. Prize winners were
Greg, Chris, Josh, Sheila, April
and John. Thank you to Mrs.
Falling for a great party.
In between all this partying
we are learning to read and are
now in our second reader, Good
Fences, to Math we are doing
subtraction. It sure was nice to
carve a pumpkin and clean out
the inside because now we use
the dried pumpkin seeds for coun-
ters in Math class.
Our first book order arrived
yesterday from the See-Saw Book
Club. It’s always exciting to get
your very own new book. These
first graders are very eager
learners.
Pat Carter, Teacher
goodies. We also had a Hallow,
een poster with safety rules on it
The mothers provided prises for
the Bingo games weplayed. It was
a lot of fan and we thank our
Moms so much for all our good
times! We enjoyed having Mrs.
Maner, Mrs. Moore, Shawn Matal
and Crystal Hammock visit with
us (faring the party.
We wrote Pen Pal letters to
Marland's Third Graders. They
wrote us first and sent Hallow,
eon pictures they had colored for
us. We are making new friends
this way. Maybe, we'll see them
in person later this year, and
next year, we may play them in
basketball.
We are beginning a health unit
on personal care. We have dis.
cussed annual eye exams. Scott
Baker has just recently had his
eyes examined and assures us it
didn't hurt Besides eye care, we
will also be looking at personal
cleanliness and other health
check-ups.
We have now completed all 26
lower case letters in cursive
handwriting. We are now practice
ing connections and spacing be*
tween words. Writing our spelling
words in cursive andlearning the
26 upper case letters are our next
goals in cursive writing.
Grade cards also went out this
week. It’s hard to believe nine
weeks of 3rd grade have flown by.
Dottle K. Kizziar
Giant Fry Pan Cooks
8000 Pieces of Chicken
.3 THE BILLINGS NEWS
Billings Noble County, Okla,
Thursday, November 10,1983
CAR CARE.
O X CX
This 10-foot wide fry pan is one of the featured attractions at
the Delmarva Chicken Festival held each year on the Delmarva
Peninsula, a part of Delaware, Virginia and Maryland During the
two day festival, 8,000 pieces of chicken are fried to a golden
brown in 300 gallons of Mazola corn oil and nearly 30,000 people
flock to the festival to sample it. Billed as “the world’s greatest
fried chicken," the coating is prepared by English’s Family
Restaurant, famous throughout Maryland While the recipe is
secret, the restaurant shared some ingredients and techniques
for this recipe
BEST FRIED CHICKEN
Drinks For Driving
Giving your car the right
drink now and then can
help save you money and
trouble. If you drive fre-
quently, you or your service
station should check these
vital fluids regularly under
the hood:
• Radiator coolant:
Monthly. To fill, add a 50-
percent anti-freeze mix, win-
ter or summer. They cus-
tomarily include rust-inhibi-
tors, water by itself doesn’t.
% cap unsifted flour
2 teaspoons paprika
% teaspoon celery salt
% teaspoon onion salt
% teaspoon salt
% teaspoon dried sage leaves
% teaspoon white pepper
1 broller-fryer chicken,
cut in parts
1% quarts (about) Mazola
corn oil
THIRD GRADE NEWS
Halloween was a lot of fun for
the Third Graders. We went to
the Fairchild Center with the first
and second grades and sang our
favorite Halloween songs. The
people there enjoyed it so much
and even handed each ofus a sack
of candy as a treat when we re*
turned to school we had our
class party. Becky Hammock and
Karen Sparks treated us with such
good treats.
We had decorated sugar cook*
les and decorated doughnuts along
with punch and a bag of candy
FRESH ROSE SALE
20% DISCOUNT
ANY SIZE PURCHASE
UNTIL 11/21/83
BRING THIS AD IN
PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR CHOICE SELECTION
POINSETTAS-FIR BOUGHS-WREATHS-GARLANDS &
GRAVE BLANKETS
Oilman endows
professorship
NORMAN — A leading
independent oilman in this
part of the country, Curtis
W Mewbourne, has endowed
a professorship in the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma’s School
of Petroleum and Geological
Engineering.
Mewboume, a loyal sup-
porter of OU’s academic pro-
grams, established the
$300,000 professorship in
petroleum engineering, the
field in which he was
graduated from OU in 1958
An Energy Center Foun-
der and an OU Associate,
Mewbourne serves as a
trustee for the OU Founda-
tion Inc. He is the president
of Mewbourne Oil Co. in
Tyler, Texas, where he is ac-
tive on the boards of numer-
ous civic, philanthropic and
church organizations.
"We believe this endow-
ment is an important ingre-
dient in the enhancement of
the School of Petroleum and
Geological Engineering,”
said OU engineering Dean
Martin C. Jischke.
The professorship was
awarded to Ronald D. Evans,
OU professor of petroleum
and geological engineering.
"The fact that the Mew-
bourne professorship was
awarded to someone already
teaching here lets the world
know we already have fac-
ulty in the school who are
outstanding,” said Roy M
Knapp, director of the OU
School of Petroleum and
Geological Engineering.
"Dr. Evans is the epitome
of an engineering educator,”
said Knapp. "He is an abso-
lutely first-rate classroom
teacher who produces educa-
tional experiences that
stimulate the students. He
also is a quality researcher
who is working on problems
of fundamental interest to
the petroleum industry.”
In large plastic or paper bag measure flour, paprika, celery salt,
onion salt, salt, sage and pepper. Shake together. Moisten
chicken with water. Place chicken, 1 piece at a time, Into bag.
Shake to coat thoroughly Repeat with remaining chicken. Place
chicken on wire rack on tray. Cover with plastic wrap. Refriger-
ate 24 to 48 hours. Pour corn oil into 5-quart dutch oven or
chicken fryer, filling no more than % full. Heat over medium-
high heat to 350°F. Carefully add chicken, a few pieces at a time.
Fry about 8 to 12 minutes or until fork tender and golden brown.
Drain on paper towels. Keep warm while frying remaining pieces.
Makes 4 servings
Gas Heating Systems
Efficient, Economical
Consumers faced with the have automatic vent dampers
cost of replacing a homeheat- which prevent warm air from
ing or air cooling system escaping when the furnace is
should select the most ef- off. When the thermostat
ficient and cost-effective calls for heat and the furnace
system, according to the goes on, the damper opens.
American Gas Association When the furnace shuts off,
(A.G.A.). the damper closes, keeping
Heating equipment has the warm air from escaping
changed significantly in the Since space cools off at a
past several years. Improved slower rate, the thermostat
pulse’ combustion, recupera- "calls" for heat less often
tive cells, induced draft, heat Most new gas furnaces also
exchanger design, power feature intermittent ignition
venting and pilotless ignition systems instead of wasteful,
are just a few of the energy continuously burning pilot
saving features available with lights. With intermittent igni-
natural gas heating systems, tion. a tiny electrical spark
the A.G.A. says. jumps across a gap to ignite
Some of these new gas fur- the pilot and then the furnace
naceshave Department of En- And only a minute amount of
ergy efficiency ratings of energy is needed
a Windshield washer flu-
id: Twice a month, more
often in bad weather. For
filling, good packaged mix-
tures resist freezing and in-
clude a cleaning solvent.
• Motor oil: Every third
gasoline fill-up. Add or
change as needed Most car
manuals call for 5W-30,
10W-30 or 10W-40 viscosity
(flowability) for general all-
weather driving. Made of
molecules chosen for stabil-
ity and slipperiness, instead
of conventionally refined
from crude oil, a modern
synthetic like Mobil 1 can
save gasoline, enable easier
cold weather starting, and
give your engine superior
protection against heat and
wear.
• Battery fluid: Monthly
(if yours is an unsealed unit
that can be checked). Add
water as needed. Avoid
sparks and flame; a battery-
can emit explosive hydrogen
gas.
• Also: Automatic trans-
mission fluid monthly, pow-
er-steering fluid monthly,
brake fluid monthly.
You understand the foil mean-
ing of "identity crisis” the first
time you try to cash a check in
a strange town.
The brain is an organ that
starts working the moment you
get up in the morning and does
not stop until you get to the office
more than 90 percent
New gas furnaces with vent
When shopping for home- dampers and intermittent ig-
heating or air cooling sys- nition can save consumers
terns, check for the federally hundreds of dollars each heat-
required Energy Guide or fact ing season
sheet available from your ap- Natural gas is the consum-
pliance dealer. This informa- ers best buy Natural gas on a
tion will provide energy el- national average costs 40 per-
ficiency ratings and allows cent less than heating oil and
consumers to compare esti- about one quarter the cost of
mated annual operating costs electric heat, according to De-
Most new gas furnaces partment of Energy statistics.
Deadline for news and adver-
tising is Tuesday noon.
Be joyful always: pray con-
tinually; give thanks in all cir-
cumstances. for this is God’s
will for you in Christ Jesus
1 Thessalonians 5:16,17,18
Owers G’ houal
Garber 3332253 —
HOME CENTER
INFORMATION WANTED
TEICTEN: NO
ON THE FOLLOWING ACCIDENT:
ON OCT. 31 BETWEEN 8 AND 11 A.M. A
TRUCK STRUCK THE OVERHEAD
TRUSS BRIDGE ON U.S. 77 OVER ROCK
CREEK NEAR CERES IN NOBLE
COUNTY APPROXIMATELY 13 MILES
NORTH OF PERRY.
9000000
0000000
1399
m
ANYONE WHO WITNESSES
A HIT-AND-RUN ACCIDENT
INVOLVING STATE PROPERTY
SHOULD CALL, COLLECT: (405)
521-3306 DURING THE DAY, OR
(405) 373-1586 AFTER 5:30 P.M.
CELEBRITY
SAE 20 PC. 3/8" DRIVE
0 REGULAR & DEEP SOCKET SET
Professional quality tool! Fully hard
9 ened. nickel chrome plated Full war
. ranty. P1320 J
100 0000000
AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCA
R&H Hdwr.
Lb
LAND CARE
SERVICES
Precise Ground
Applica tion of
Pesticides
Call Lee Schnaithman
725-3694
Bill Steinert
358-2588
Farmers
Spray Weedy Wheat
Early And Save
Reim’s Spraying
Service
863-2948 863-2688
THANK YOU
Members Of The
Football Team
We Are Proud Of Your Efforts
And The Sportsmanship You Displayed
While Participating In The
Billings Bulldog Football Program.
Your Community Fans Are
Appreciative And You Can Feel Proud!
First State Bank
MEMBER FDIC
DEPOSITS INSURED UP TO $100,000
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Stoll, Ruby. The Billings News (Billings, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1983, newspaper, November 10, 1983; Billings, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2249936/m1/3/?q=Homecoming+queen+1966+North+Texas+State+University: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.