Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / Aug. 15, 1974, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE 4 THE YANCEY JOURNAL AUGUST 15, 1974 You can spend one very different and very demanding j* weekend a month. In the Army Reserve. THE ARMY RESERVE. IT PAYS TO GO TO MEETINGS. D o-lt-VourseW ‘ 0) | . F°r more family fun ... WMMSSm gracious living, we sel :■ fe JM Celotex WBm ACOUSTICAL SESCSL, CEILINGS j-yt* ing up to 70% of the noise £ver heard a corn striking theirasurface will m ? n . ' c * n ‘ t hear myself insure a quieter room ... Noise in the home—distracting and irritating, has m l" T !3 i * S£S or °™ “ *Jf l6 ,"’ P ' oWin * Celotex .wusticSi comes lively. problem. Today s smaller homes need the magic of ceilings have been in efficient acoustical products in all rooms for relaxed stalled. Noise is drastically family life. m,king co " v#r - J patron more enjoyable. In Juat one day you can pul up a ■i 'k «faiew Sffffßß ||||^CELOTEX homo Improvement NJ -C |_fr*l||||o^h Y es, the average installation can go just that fast! And you /Ayr can have '* ceiling of acoustical or decorative'fiberboard, CIICM or luminous (for glare-free lighting) panels...or you can railmna cgpbine the different types of lay-in panels for special * C8,1m 9 5 ceiling effects. No mess or fuss ... the panels are simply ■ FOREVER. .tipped into position in a framework of lightweight metal Jf' ■ ft**- channels hung from the old ceiling or open joists Instantly | / —Here’s the answer for those removable for cleaning. JAwTt CTacked ceilings-which W mu\ asscsss* makes it easy to ower ceilings to Modern room require- / if M\ \ yeu baautiful, pre-decorated ments. In i emodeling, old cracked ceilings are concealed: Wis JIW /\.\.\\ Celotex ceilings which in basement installations, unsightly pipes, ducts and beams J Iff /\\ \\ install right over the old are hidden. : -j It f/l \. L plaster in just a few hours. f + pi 1 No muss, no fuss and the ccLom f F.iE..Vuo ./ \\ \ Price is a real bargain. ACOUSTICAL ANO // lit DECOAATIVC LAY-IN , / I I PANELS, AND . I LUMINOUS PANELS . ' V'I A J*:'i ' t:-v,: ‘ T' —>ai mmmi i \ H I kV: r ;: ?rrii ISSUfe PlastiGard Rondelay Sculptured Spun Gold Plain White 12" x 24" £ - j CEILING TILE $ |J 75 QSI So easy to install with staple-gun or I jff 16ft adhesive. Put right over existing flat dOX « f %i ce 'jing or install on furring strips. \ x 24" panels make quick work out I * IM of the job. BOSTICH STAPLE GUN STAPLES FURRING STRIPS Jolt what you n..d to. _ BOX Os 4% m Um for piling til. or C^iLiL install til. and for C 1 AOl 1000 ° n ‘l! 0 '' 1 woll ‘ ,or T I hundreds of other | ■ 1/2" poneling. M %—400 I. MAIM STRIir r- * PHONE 929-3186 JOHNSON CITY Celebrated- Birthday Little Miss Traci Buckner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Buckner, celebrated her 4th birthday on Sunday, August 11. During her Sunday School Class cupcakes were served to Joel Hughes, Angie Presnell, Brian Robinson, Traci and Mrs. Ethel Fox, teacher. In the afternoon there was a small party with cake and ice cream at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hayter. Traci Buckner Mrs. Grace Kouns and Mrs. Sarah Upchurch of Asheville were guests of Miss Hope Bailey last weekend. * Miss Cathy Deyton spent last week with her sister Mrs. Joe Denney and Mr. Denney in Pickens, S.C. * Lloyd Williams of Alexan dria, Va. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Roy King. * Rev. W. W. Lawton of Dallas, Texas is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Don sides and family. * Mrs. Harold Harris under went surgery in St. Joseph’s Hospital last week. * Mr. and Mrs. Bob Schrann and son of Edina, Minn, have been visiting Mrs. Schrann’s grandmother, Mrs. Banks and her aunt, Mrs. Ruby Clayton and other relatives. * Born to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Boyer a boy, Tracy Allen on Friday, August 2 in Memorial Mission Hospital, Asheville. * Mr. and Mrs. Fred Koch and Chris are in Colrain, Mass, for a weeks visit with Mr. Koch’s brother, Robert Koch. * Mrs. Ransome Higgins has been released from Yancey Youth Corps Worker Shows Handmade Quilt Marina Peterson, 16, of the Green Mountain Community, shows off a quilt made by the hands of Mrs. Lillie Bryant of Route 2, Burnsville. Marina, a Neighborhood Youth Corps worker, staffs the WAM i' Mountain Crafts office above Pollard’s Drugs this summer. She is a junior at Cane River High School. [You Will Never Buy Cheaper Come - First Served Mobile Home Sale • The Man 1 50 ' . 2 bedroom us °* These Are Lot Prices ► < These homes will be sold at a minimum over cost! Now is the time to own your own home and save, too! Prices have increased *2oo°° to *soo°° since these homes , were purchased > < I > A. Financing on the spot. I !■ Homes selling at lot prices j I C. Buy at old price v \<V Delivery Charge Extra. I 1 Adjoining Roberts-Corn Chevrolet [ (j&afotfd. *!kc. v 'George Roberts) t 682 ' 2191 682-6141' HERE AND THERE.... d & urnsv *H e Vi? BY MRS. BRUCE WESTALL £B2-2252 Hospital where she was a ptient for several days. * Guests of the Gordon Ben netts over the weekend on Water Tank Hill were Mrs. Bennett’s mother, Mrs. Hugh McNeley of Cazewell, Tenn., a sister, Mrs. Fredrick Brown and Mr. Brown and three children of Miami. The Bennetts are returning to their home in Miami after spending the summer here. * Misses Mitzi Laughrun, JuJena Young, Kim Westall, Gwen Tomberlin and Jan Hensley spent last week in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Accom panying them were Mrs. Earl Young, Miss Gwen Harris and Sheree Banks. * Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Westall entertained the following guests with a luncheon at their home last Wednesday. Mrs. Salvie Ramsey of Alexandria, Va., Mrs. W. Z. Roberston, Mrs. Phillip Styles, Mrs. John Banks and Milt Johnson. * Dr. and Mrs. Richard Thompson £ .id family of Lenoir, N.C. visited Mrs. Thompsons mother, Mrs. Lillian Jelley. * Mr. and Mrs. Bill Price and family and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ray of Greenville, S.C. spent the week here with relatives and to attend the wedding of Mark Bennett Jr. to Miss Patricia Randolph. * Bill Silvers is a patient in Yancey Hospital. * The Youth Choir of the First Baptist Church in Marianna, Fla. presented the morning worship hour in song here at the First Baptist Church, Sunday. * Billy Koch has returned home from St. Joseph’s Hospi tal i{i Asheville where he has bdbn a patient. * Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Davis were called to Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. last week due to the death of Mr. Davis’ sister, Miss Clara Davis. , „ Mrs. Carolyn Yuziuk and children drove to Pensacola, Florida last Wednesday for a visit with her brother and family, Lt. and Mrs. James Hardekopf and Christopher. She drove back to Burnsville Sunday with Jeff and Kim, leaving Sharon and Greg to stay for a week’s vacation before flying home to start school. * Mr. and Mrs. Joe King and family of Spartanburg, S.C. spent the weekend with Mrs. George King. * Mr. and Mrs. Mack Ray and Drs. David and Carolyn Corf and baby daughter have re turned home from several weeks of vacation. Their destination was Fairbanks, Alaska, but due to washed out roads on the Alaskan highway, they went to Edmonton, Canada and other points of interest. * Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Banks of Detroit, Mich, have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Banks of Bolens Creek for the past two weeks. While they were here, the Banks family had a picnic at Carolina Hemlocks with over 30 members of the family present. Brief Stop Ends With Directorship The more Janet Crisp passed the Guilford County Juvenile Detention Home on her way to visit her family in Burnsville, “the more it bothered me.” She wondered about the children inside, who they were, what they had done, whether they had any one at home, somebody to care. One day she didn’t drive by. She stopped and went inside, hoping to do volunteer work. Says Janet Crisp, “They told me that would be fine, but the children were only there for a short time. I wouldn’t be able to do follow-up work.” They referred Janet to the Volunteers to the Court. Janet, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Crisp of Burnsville and a graduate of _ East Yancey High School and McDowell Technical Institute, was the first volunteer to be placed on a juvenile case, which the program had just begun handling. She was given two sisters to work with, teenagers who had been running away from home and school; That was in October and C today, according to Miss Crisp, E “you can’t even tell they’re the fjjj same girls. They have made f remarkable improvement.” On Monday, Julie Rochelle, ‘ presently the executive director | of Volunteers to the Court, will j step out as head of the program J and Miss Crisp will assume the j directorship. In her new job she will be coordinating the volun teers and the 150 first offenders participating in the program, which has grown considerably mm Rtf* nB Janet Crisp -.ince it started on a small scale some six years ago. She will also try to recruit new volunteers who work with young people on probation after ♦heir first conviction in court. Miss Crisp, who came from a l.imily of five children, says she tt Js lucky to have had “such a ■appy childhood” and wants to help young people who did not. In a program where progress is often slow and sometimes frustrating, Miss Crisp plans to have better interaction among volunteers during their periodic meetings. “It helps to know how the other volunteers are feeling and to learn from each other.” We need each her. , The Army Reserve. It pays to g 6 to meetings. i i gi
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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Aug. 15, 1974, edition 1
4
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