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The Northside Sun from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 35
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The Northside Sun from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 35

Publication:
The Northside Suni
Location:
Jackson, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Classified Obituaries I (The Sun offers free classified ads to those who wish to arrange for car pools for school or work. Call Mrs. Lewis, 957-1122.) SPECIAL NOTICE TYPESETTING SERVICE, LATEST EQUIPMENT, WIDE SELECTION. School papers, ad agencies, printers. Northside Sun, 614 Briarwood 957-1122.

(tf) BUY SELL or TRADE anything anytime. Call 845-2665. Let me install a water treatment system in your home for pennies per day. Stop paying through the nose bottled water. Call 982-8902 after 5.

Receive a letter from Santa Claus for that personal touch. Call 856-5302. OUSED CARS MGA 1962 Mark 1600 Coupe -rare model. Needs restoration. Owner has other interests.

Will sacrifice for $1500 or best offer. 981-2161 weekdays, 366-0702 nights and weekends. GRAND PRIX LJ-1976, cruise, power windows, Night 981-5690. Day 956-9272. 1978 Fairmont 2-door Canary yellow wire wheels air, power steering, power brakes.

$3200. 956-4540. '74 Pinto Wagon $1325. Bill 354-6779 days; 856-7215 nights. Good cheap transportation 1973 Ford Gran Torino 4-door, factory rebuilt small V-8.

Runs good. $900. 856-6089. 1975 Gran Prix-loaded-CB, AM-FM radio, electric windows, bucket seats. $1700.

Call 956-7479. '79 COUGAR fully loaded. 28,000 miles. $5400. 371-1915 after 4.

1976 CORVETTE L-82 extras. Good condition. $7000. 956-5062 after 5. 981-1531 office.

1974 GMC ton, power, air, radio, CB. Good mechanical condition. $1600. 992-2940. '79 Cougar XR-7 has power steering, power brakes, air conditioned, FM stereo tape player.

Navy blue. Assume note or a new loan. 856-5297. Volkswagen 1970 sell as is $900. Call between 6 9 p.m.

956-7691. 1974 DATSUN B-210 standard transmission, radio, recent engine overhaul. Adult driven. $1595 firm. May be seen Reservoir Shopping Center.

992-9968. 1963 Bel Air Chevrolet $300. Call 956-3047. JAGUAR 1974 V-12 convertible. Turquoise with black leather interior, all available options.

Perfect condition. $13,500. 956-2690 or 352-4443. PONTIAC SUNBIRD 1980 red hatchback, V-6, power auto, tilt wheel, air, 6500 miles. Need larger car for business.

$5,770. 355-5234, 956-3398. Autos EASY RENTAL CARS, INC. Is your car in the shop for more than a day? Rent a car for as low as $798 per day and per mile. Call 982-0045 or 982-8600 FORDI MERCURY Ray Thompson Ford, Inc.

"A Personal Service Organization" Canton Hwy. 51 S. 859-3441 Jxn. 353-2444 INTEREST RATE FOR DECEMBER 12.92 A.P.R. 4 Door Citation-Fully Equipped $16577 PER MONTH Equipped: 4 cylinder, 4 speed, air tinted glass, power steering, power brakes, plus other options.

Cash price $6977., $1,000 down, cash or trade. A.P.R. 12.92. 48 months. 4 Door Chevette Fully Equipped Equipped: 4 cylinder, automatic, air, tinted glass, am radio, rally wheels, $12977 MONTH A.P.R.

$5,677., $7,241.92. 12.92 sidewall $1,000 48 down tires. cash months. Cash or D.P.P. trade.

price approved credit Limited source. ROGERS-HAVARD CHEVROLET "Dedicated To Quality Service and Sales' Brandon, MS. PHONE 825-2277 New pledges Thursday, December 11, 1980 THE NORTHSIDE SUN, JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI Page 11C The Sun Guarantees To Sell Your Car Boat RV TV Appliance Or any household Item to a value of $5,000. (No price limits on cars, boats or RV's.) Place your Item for Sale ad in the Sun Classifieds, up to 20 words, and pay only the four week rate. If the item isn't sold, we'll continue the ad at no charge until it is sold, or for 26 insertions.

if your item doesn't sell during the 26 weeks, we will give you, on request, a full refund! The minimum charge on this "Guarantee" is for 20 words, and the four time rate on that is a low, low, $4. Individuals only No Dealers, and no real estate. $400 Cash or Credit Card; $4,00 add $2 for billing The only change allowed in copy is to lower the price if you so desire. San Classifieds 957-1122 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES WOMEN WALLPAPER BETTER and neater! Painting, too! 981-1304 or 982- 8071. PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Repair or sell Kenmore, Whirlpool, washers and dryers, 922- 1899.

956-5038 Additions, Home ImREMODELING ABSHIER A SON BLDR. provements, Firm Prices, Financing arranged in your home. All work guaranteed. CARPET REPAIR Burns, soiled, etc. Reasonable.

982-2321. Aluminum window screens custom made doors and windows rescreened. 362-3212. CONCRETE work, patios, patio covers, reasonable prices. Free estimates.

Call Ron Clay, 825-2690, 939-4546. Foundation repairs leveling houses, slabs and conventionals, French drains and water problems. Free estimates. Call Miss. Termite Control, 922-7714 or 372-6367 after 6.

PLUMBING SERVICE REPAIR. Water heaters and stove connections. Licens ed and bonded. 373-2828. LONNIE'S BUSHHOG SERVICE.

Call 362-3091 day or night. WALLPAPERING done. Small jobs on ly. Reasonable rates. 362- 9840.

(tf) Painting, paperhanging and repairs -residential and commercial. 30 years experience. Houses washed. 922-5073. ROOFING Residential and commercial, all types of roofing and repairs.

Bonded. Free estimates. Call Ralph Simpson. 922-3175. Autos Autos 'Fowler Buick USED CAR CENTER 1011 South State St.

354-2600 354-5200 ECONOMY CARS 1980 Buick Skylark $6788 1978 Ford Pinto. $2688 1978 Opel Coupe. $3688 1978 Ford Mustang 2 2... $4388 SPORTS CARS 1979 Toyota $7488 1979 Datsun 280 $8988 1978 Chevrolet Z-28-. $5488 1978 Pontiac Trans-Am.

$4888 LUXURY CARS 1977 Mercury Grand Marquis $2988 1976 Cadillac Coupe DeVille. $3688 1976 Olds Royale 88. $2288 1978 Pontiac Bonneville $4788 TRUCKS STATION WAGONS 1979 Chevrolet Scottsdale. $4788 1974 International Travel. $1888 1976 Buick Century Wag.

$3688 1976 Buick Estate Wag. $2088 ON THE SPOT FINANCING 48 Hour Money Back Guarantee On All Used Cars. 12 Mo. or 20,000 Miles Warranty AVAILABLE on Quality Cars MRS. WILLIAM J.

CHAPMAN Services for Mrs. William J. (Patsy) Chapman, 237 Bay Park Brandon, were held Wednesday, Dec. 10, at North Park Presbyterian Church. The Rev.

Brister Ware officiated. Mrs. Chapman, 45, died Tuesday, Dec. 9, at Mississippi Baptist Medical Center after a long illness. Nee Patsy Ford of New Orleans, she lived in the Jackson area for the past 25 years.

She was an active member of North Park Presbyterian Church a and was associated with Metal Trims Industries, as an ecutive assistant. Survivors include her husband, William J. Chapman of Brandon; four sons, Kenny Chapman of Houston, Kerry Chapman of Jackson, Keith Chapman of Hattiesburg and Sidney Chapman of Jackson; her mother, Mrs. Victor R. Ford of New Orleans; and a brother, Victor R.

Ford III of New Orleans. Burial was in the Lakewood Memorial Park. Wright and Ferguson Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Pallbearers were her sons and Bill Turner and Bob Dickman. Ten Jackson coeds are among 48 pledging Zeta Tau Alpha Watkins, 5904 social sorority at Mississippi State University during the 1980 row, Marguerite fall semester.

They are (from left) Back row, Cindy Millican, Kim Maxwell, Brandon; Gay Eatmon; Abby Knight, 850 Newland; Alice Jackson, 1 now The Bottom Line Candid Answers To Your Questions About Advertising and Business Topics. By S. GALE DENLEY Associate Professor of Journalism University of Mississippi We tried a new mail out in addition to our regular promotion last week and it really brought in the folks. Our sales were and we had new customers in store. Why Should We Stay In The Newspaper? Dear WSWSITN: My first impulse is to tell you to try it and see.

But this wouldn't be fair to anyone -the newspaper, your regular customers, and especially to you. It wouldn't be fair to the newspaper for it is now doing a quite adequate job of bringing in a steady flow of business for you. It wouldn't be fair to your regular customers who are accustomed to looking in the paper for your ads not to find them. (As you know if you have ever watched people throw away the flyers and circulars in the mail now days, many of them don't make it into the home.) It wouldn't be fair to you for you would be giving up a first class effort for something that would eventually prove to be less effective. If you will be entirely honest you will find a large factor in the perceived response to your effort was because you were looking for new results.

There are new people in your store every -this week you attributed them to the Society to Prevent Blindness hears Mrs. Winter's remarks Mrs. William Winter was the featured speaker at the annual meeting of the Mississippi Society to Prevent Blindness held recently in Jackson. Mrs. Winter touched on the impact on a family when one of its members suffers a visionthreatening problem.

She also encouraged those present to become more involved in the fight to save sight by supporting Mississippi Society to Prevent Blindness. The meeting, which was attended by some 69 members and guests, had as its theme "Light One Candle." This idea was carried out in effective decorations and in the report of the Director, Mrs. Edith Mullin. The president, Gerardus Hundscheid also underscored the idea in his opening remarks to those assembled. Serving the society for the coming year will be the officers elected at the dinner meeting: Gerardus Hundscheid, THOMAS A.

TURNER III is now associated with Kilgore Seay Insurance Inc. Turner, a 1972 graduate of the University of Mississippi has been in the insurance agency business in Jackson for eight years specializing in commercial property and casualty coverages and group health and life insurance. Waverly; Barbara Poole, 5805 Baxter. Front Luke, Cathy Hemphill, 5425 Carter Oak; 228 Cedarhurst; Martha Howle, formerly of of Juniper Jenks, and Julie Gunter. Three women to become patrol officers Three women, including Linda D.

Freeman, 30, of Jackson, and Barbara J. Roby, 28, of Ridgeland, will make history in Mississippi when they are sworn in Friday, Dec. 12, as Mississippi Highway Patrol Officers. They are among 42 cadets to receive the oath. This is the first time for women to be patrol officers since the force began in 1938.

Other Jackson cadets to be sworn in are Marvin 0. Harris 26; Philip Wayne Hemphill, 28; Calvin R. Weathersby, 23; George White, 25; and Charles Frederick Gilbert, 24. Christmas Tree Came From Ancient Rites The pagans decorated trees, particularly, evergreens, because they thought the trees were inhabited by woodland spirits. The Druids of ancient England tied gilded apples onto tree branches.

During Saturnalia, the Romans decorated small trees with toys, masks of Bacchus, and candles. Centuries passed before anyone took a tree inside the house and decorated. No one knows exactly who was responsible for the first indoor tree. Some say it was Martin Luther, who lived in Germany from 1483 to 1546. Others say it was an Austrian, in 1605.

We do know that a German decc rated the first indoor tree in America, in 1832. It was not until the Teddy Rooseyears, however, that Christmas trees gained favor and became an American tradition. DUCK SEASON Some 33,000 hunters are expected to head for the marshes and swamps on Saturday, Dec. 13 as Mississippi's waterfowl season opens. Technical personnel expect state hunters to bag upwards of some 250,000 ducks of all types by the time the 50-day season ends Jan.

31. Ensembles to perform concerts at office buildings new type of promotion. In the past you haven't expected anything out of the ordinary, so you simply didn't see it. Another factor is the prices you ran in the flyer. These are much lower than you have run in the recent past.

So the reaction to the lower prices would have occurred anyway. The fact that they were also distributed in a new medium was coincidential. This is not to say you shouldn't try new promotional devices. To not do so would be foolish. But to embrace each new device as the best by attributing all accumulated success to its use would also be foolish.

Day in and day out, there is no substitute for the established local news media as a vehicle for your advertising. So use these new devices with the idea of supplementing long standing and proven advertising practices. Don't give up a good thing, until you are sure you have found a better one. Chances are you could have achieved the same results by increasing your efforts in the established media. The next time you get anxious for a change, you might give it a try.

Send Questions or Comments to S. Gale Denley, Associate Professor, Department of Journalism, University, Miss. 38677 Sun Beams John Parker Hemleben Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hemleben, 1421 Lyncrest announce the birth of their son, John Parker, Nov.

24, at Mississippi Baptist Medical Center. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whatley of Clinton. Paternal grandparents are Dr.

Sylvester Hemleben of Cocoa Beach, Fla. and Mrs. Mary Hemleben of Lafayette, La. Sunday Concert set The Mississippi Museum of Art will host a Sunday Concert featuring tenor Guy Hargrove at 2:30 p.m. Dec.

14 in the Atrium Gallery. YULE TREES Christmas tree production is examined on "Farmweek" at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Dec. 15, on Mississippi ETV. Three ensembles of the Jackson Symphony Orchestra will present concerts Dec. 17 as a Christmas gift to state employees.

The concerts are co-sponsored by the Jackson Symphony Orchestra Association and the Secretary of State. The Brass Trio of trumpet, trombone and horn players will perform from 11:30 to 12:30 p.m. in the Woolfolk State Office Building. The Woodwind Quintet (horn, clarinet, oboe, bassoon and flute) will perform from noon to 1 p.m. in the lobby of the Sillers Building.

The String Quartet (two violins, cello and viola) will perform from 1-2 p.m. in the Mississippi Historical Museum (Old Capitol Building). The performances are open to the public. River Watch Reservoir, a.m. 295.19 Hwy 80 gauge, a.m.

7.1' RAINFALL, through Dec. 8 1980 0.21" 1979 0.03" Year, 1980 62.36" Year, 1979 88.60" dent; Mrs. Rickey Koon, presidentFinancial Development; Mrs. William Ashford, Art Nabers, Port Stanley Wilson III, and Miss Mary Ann Elkin, Miss Frances Ann Galloway of Jackson will coordinate public information The Mississippi Society to Prevent Blindness is a nonprofit, voluntary health agency affiliated with the National Society to Prevent Blindness. It is the only agency that works entirely in the prevention of blindness and is supported solely by public contributions, legacies and bequests.

Ticketing up, Accidents down Accidents and moving violation tickets issued in Precinct Four Dec. 2-8 and for the previous weeks. This 1 wk 2 wks wk ago ago Tickets 33 21 47 Accidents 21 35 53 Selective Traffic Enforcement Program (STEP) Tickets 30 21 29 Accidents 12 17 11 Totals This 1 wk 2 wks wk ago ago Tickets 66 42 76 Accidents 33 54 64 WHAT MAKES YOU THINK SO? I THINK We WE LIVE TOO MADE CLOSC TO THAT NUCLEAR PONCR ANOTHER THANKSGIVING foo EAT US a LUCKY FOR US Service News Copley.

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Pages Available:
117,103
Years Available:
1971-2024