SH0Pat FIRST Lowville Sport Shop

JOURNAL AND REPUBLICAN, LOWVILLE, NEW YORK 1 1
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER I , 1972
H o s p ita l N e w s
Cash and Carry Special
C h e e s e a n d D a ir y P r o d u c t s
at
N e w B re m e n C h e e s e F a c t o r y
G ift C h eese fo r
H o ffm a n
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T h a n k sg iv in g
a n d
&
C h r istm a s
D u d o ,
In c .
PLANT OPEN MON. THRU FRL 9 - 4
.•
r
SERVICED, WINTERIZED
READY TO GO
FALL WEDDING - Mr. and M rs.
A rthur Mathys, RJ3. 1, C astor­
land, announce the engagement
of their daughter, Judith L or­
raine, to John Robert Hodktnson,
son of Mr. and M rs. Donald Hodkinsoo, Croghan.
Mtss Mathys is a 1970 gradu­
a te of Beaver R iver C entral
School and a June graduate of
Jefferson Community College.
M r. Hodklnson ts also a gradu­
a te o f B eaver R iver C entral
School and of Jefferson Commun­
ity College, and has served tnthe
U.S. Army,.
A December wedding Is plan­
ned.
All-State
C onductor
1970 FORD, 3/4 ton, 4 whl. dr.
Sheridan Plopper, Lowvllle; Lynn
W estern,
Lowvtlle;
Bernard
Rook, S r ., LowvUIe; Ray Van
Houghnet, Lowvllle; Barbara
Malnvllle, LowvUIe; Dorothy
Fayle, Lowvllle; Plus Bash, Low­
vUIe; Lina Stowell, Croghan; Ar lene Snyder, Lowvllle; Berna­
dette
C brlstm an,
Lowville;
Louise Carl, L yons F alls; Ruth
Beyer, Lowvllle; M lldred Flana­
gan, Constableville; Jam es F . E a­
gan, Constableville; Jam es F.
Easton, Castorland; Minnie Pfaff,
Lyons F alls.
BIRTHS: Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Morak, Lo-wvllTe, a daughter, Oct.
21; Mr. and M rs, C harles Young,
Turin, a daughter, Oct. 21.
Charles **Ed” Seherneck, ele­
m entary a rt teacher at Lowvllle
Academy and Central School, win
present his personal turning of
"T he Four Seasons of the North
Country,” following the monthly
business m eeting of the Beaver
Falls Home School Association
on Thursday, Nov. 2, at 8 p.m .,
tn the school auditorium.
At the Dec. 7 meeting of the
Association, "A Decorative Ho­
liday” will he presented by M rs.
Bruce LsChausse and Mrs. Wil­
liam Lyndaker. Tree ornaments,
crewel work, pa strie s, candles,
e tc ., created by local talent, wtll
be on display fo r Instruction and
for sale, A contest for the best
decorated bom e for the Yule ho­
liday season will be judge a s part
of the program .
T hose Interested tn displaying
handmade articles at the show
should contact M rs. LaCbausse
at 346-6722 o r Mrs. Lyndaker
at 346-1308r ...................... ....
Copenhagen Tops League
Copenhagen soccer team end­
ed the 1972 season with a record
of ll-w tns 1-loss and 2-tles.
The Golden Knights outscored
their opponents 23 to 10. The
key to tbelr success was a wellbalanced team. Leading the ltne
with 9 goals and 2 assists was
Kim Sheitz. Co-captaln, Clif­
ford Z ehr, and wing, Bruce Aubin,
both scored 3 goals each and
together assisted on 9 others.
Gerald Martin, at Inside, rounds
out the offense by scoring 1 goal
and 3 assists.
The defense for Copenhagen
L O W V IL L E
[376-6568
M O T O R S
t, W
,fc;
f
V i/ ,
eL
IN C .
junior, Dan P etrus, shut out the
opponents tn 8 of the 14 games.
Goalie, Jeff L ucia, did hn ex­
cellent Job in the nets for his
first year. With the exception
of the four penalty kicks by ttte
opposition, Lncla only allowed 6
goals for the entire season.
S P O R T
S H O P
We a r e b u lg in g a t th e s e a m s t o f u l f i l l
y o u r C h r is tm a s d re a m s !
TOYS - GAMES - HOBBIES
SPORTING GOODS
LowvilleSportShop
Equipment
Sales and
Rentals
E S S E N L O H R
1
held the opponents to a .71 aver­
age per game. Outstanding for
the Knights was H arry Morse at
half-back. Morse also scored 5
goals adding to the Knights threat.
The full-back co-captaln, Bryan
Tousant, sen io r, John Repak, and
SH0PatFIRST
Film Program
Set At B.R.
Moshe Paranov, president e merltus of H artt College of
Music at the U niversity of H art­
ford, will rehearse the Area AllState Orchestra for two days and
conclude with a concert at Low­
vUIe Academy Saturday Evening,
1967 CHEVEUE Coupe
November 11, at 8 p.m .
M r. Paranov has directed more
1970 NOVA, V-8 Sedan
than 500 opera productions as
music d irector and conductor of
1966 FORD. 6 cyl. sedan
H artt opera theater since its
1968 Impala Sport Sedan
founding tn 1942. Such p erfor­
mances Include, the firs t full
1968 CAMARO, V-8 Coupe
U6AL
length televised opera, "H ansel
and G retel" on Schenectady's
1968 JEEP WA60NEER, 4 wb. dr.
1L w a n w iiflk ----WRGB In 1943, and opera for
t will not b e responsible for
children productions a t Carnegie any btlle contracted by anyone
Ball, aod throughout Connecticut other than myself.
FLfS MANY MORE SEE
and New England. M r. Paranov Brenda Koster.
l l- 3 - p
was co-conductor of the Hartford
Ingersoll
Fra n c is D u flo
R a n d y Essejjlo hr Symphony O rchestra from 1947ADIRONDACK CENTRAL
1953 and from 1954 to 1964 be
SCHOOL
was conductor of the Brockton
D istrict Office
(M ass.) Symphony O rchestra.
130 Ford Street
M r, Paranov** professional
Boonville, New York 13309
c are er began a s a pianist tn 1911.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
He has since given many concert
recitals tn H artford, New fo rk ,
Sealed proposals for tbe fur­
Boston and oher major cities. nishing and delivery of bread and
M r. Paranav waa co-founder bread products as set forth In the
of the Julius H artt School of Specifications and tn accordance
Music In 1920, From 1920-1932 vritb Section 103, Article 5-A
he was associate d irector and and A rticle 119-0 of the General
front' 1932 to 1938 Dean o f Hartt Municipal Law will be opened and
College, University o f Hartford. publicly read at the D istrict Of­
Moshe Paranav was president of fice of th e Adirondack Central
H artt College ofM uslc 1957-1971 School 110 Ford S treet, Boonand president em eritus July 1971. v llle, N.Y,, on November 14,
1972 at 9:30 a.m . Bids received
a lte r that stated hour and day
shall be rejected.
T he B oards of Education of
THE FOREST AND YOU. No 4
toe Adirondack Central, Holland
Patent C entral, Remaen Central,
South lew is Central, and West
Canada Valley Central schools
reserve the right to refuse,any
Y o u n g
t r e e s :
o r a ll bids o r to waive such In­
form alities o r accept equivalent
bids where lt Is determined to be
to tbe best Interests of the school
o u r m
o s t e f f i c i e n t
d istricts.
Specifications and bid forms
for white bread, wheat bread,
a i r p u r i f i e r .
hamburger ro lls, hot dog rolls
and dinner rolls may be obtain­
ed from the Adirondack Central
transformation,
comes
from
the
sun.
To
reproduce
School
D istrict Office, 110 Ford
Human beings andanimals sham the air with
even
a
fraction
of
it
mechanically
i
s
far
S
treet, Boonville, N.Y, 13309.
the earth's plant life. They consume oxygen and
beyobd the technology of man.
give offcarbon dioxide; plants consumecarbon
Dated: October 27, 1972
dioxide and give off oxygen. Human beings and
FRANCES E. CASEY
animals must have oxygen to survive. It
D istrict Clerk
4,
helps bum food inthe body, just
11-1-c
^
os it helps bum wood in
1969 CHEVY, 6 cyl., 1/2 ton p/up
1971 TORONADO
1971 OLOS, Custom Cruiser, 3 seats
Bob
ADMISSIONS; Robert Smith,
Rome; George Olley, Lowvtlle;
B ert Stiles, Croghan; Robert Ev­
ans, P o rt Leyden; Leonard Aus­
tin, Glenfleld; Mlcbelle Jones,
Lyons F a lls; Paula Delles, Low­
vUIe; Patricia White, Clinton;
Mamie O’Donnell, Copenhagen;
Pearl DeLawyer, LowviUe; Erica
Hutchins, Lyons Falls; Richard
K. Hardy, Port Leyden; Hattie
Agens, Cart .air-; Lena Hirschey,
Beaver Falls; Florence Moore,
Glenfleld; Rtta Ortlleb, Martins­
burg; Francis Boulio, Copenha­
gen; Jam es Smith, LowvUIe;
Sharlene Prashaw, Glenfleld;
Wallace Balash, LowvUIe; Law­
son Rntnage, LowvUIe; Pearl
Rennie. Lowvllle; Ronald MlUer,
Lowvllle; M ary Slemlenowlcz,
LowvUIe; Judy Axtell, Grelg;
L6WVILLE
C a n e s
-
W a lk e r s
W h e e lc h a ir s
B e d s id e
ta b le s
-
-
C o m m o d e s
H o s p ita l b e d s
-
B a th tu b
r a ils
Lowville
Pharmacy,Inc.
IBS State Street
376-3414
Lowvllle
Sun. H ilM a y s 7 p .m . - 9 p .m . M m .- S a t. 8 a .m . ■ 9 p jw .
anopenfire.
An old forest, filled
wit*’ overmature
LOWVILLE LAWN & GARDEN
S. State St
Phone 376-3821
decaying trees, consumes
aa much oxygen as it
C v L y j t S y j creates and contributes
oo net gain ih woodfibeF.L i s ,
,
HI
An average acre of
vigorously growing
„.
young trees inn com­
mercial forest consumes. 12 tens of carbon dioxide
a year, gives off 4 tons of fresh oxygen, and
produces 4 tons of new wood.
That makes the growing commercial forest a
better anti-pollution device than anything
man has come up with so fnr.
Nature’s Air Conditioner
Hall of all photosynthesis, the basis o( every
food cham, takes place in forest lands. The forests
are the basic underpinning of the world's food,
as well as its principal air conditioner.
An air conditioner does more than purify the
air, though. It cools, and humidifies.
The net cooling effect of a young, healthy
tree isequivalent ta 10room-sizedair conditioners
operating 20 hours a day. Air may besstnuch
a s 20 degrees cooler under the canopy.
Transpiration is the process a tree uses to
pour moisture through its leaves or needles into
the surrounding air. The combined cooling and
humidifying activity of a
forest is roughlyequal to
the same area of
i
ocean.
Transpiration by
green plant? on n
global scale uses t>00
times more e n e r g y
every year than
man obtains from
all the fo*®3 fuels
he ases, and 0.000
tiroes more energy
than roan makes
avmTableto himself
in the formof
electricity.
This energy, plus
the energy used to create
wood and to perform the
carbon d loti de-oxygen
K e e p in g th e F o r e s t H e a lth y
Nature keeps this process going by periodically
tt has stagnated.
wiping out stagnant timber. When a stand of
trees gets too old, it is an easy prey for fire,
disease,a nd insects. Or the trees simply dieof
old age. Then, pvduaBy, new trees springup,
and the forest ia reborn.
Man can modify the process to his advantage
by controlling fire, by removing trees infected
with insects and disease, and by harvesting
mature trees.
At the same time, man can assure a steady
flowof timber along with all the
environmental benefits of
a healthy forest
These environ­
mental benefits in­
clude wildlife habitat
watershed and erosion
sa
control and, of course, all
of the recreational uses
familiar to us all: picnick­
ing, camping, sightseeing, hiking, boating,
swimming, birdwatching, photography, hunting,
fishing, benypiddng, rockhounding, and
many more,
Tbe forest is a kind ofhugebutverydelicate
machine. And it takes a lot of hard work, and
plenty of imagination, to keep it operating
at peak efficiency.
Imagination is the key word at Georgia-Fscific.
Through imagination, we are constantly im­
proving our methods of timber management
We’re making sure that all the benefits tbe forest
has to offer will be available to everyone. Forever.
d?
.a c « *
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0 °/ o
Friday-Nov. 3
8:00 to 9:00
Saturday-Nov.
8:00 to 4:00
o
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J O H N D E E R E ’ 73
S N O W S LE D S & SNOW B LO W ER S
Fite Avtitahle on Loan. Free literature.
story of HomanEnt-iyrire," a ihreo tire- festival
award w,rm*r.t-U*«tK'uttre«tanninsandelsat
Gcoma-FaciSe iaUoin*Inprotect tfMtar.vtr- rjr.nr. Tria
2Sminute. 16mmmlnr flintia idealfot all exes.
Literatureahosnho—Oeefxia-Pedfic foreatere -ri
ecot-xti*tasreimprrmnx Ihefereat*»evfcrr.trottinx au and.
—ter pollution
Fot 61mot tree literature, sartfe:
G—'.rxa.Feritir Filurauor.I .Ufr.ry, SCOS '.V Pitch a—..
Jt.o rU in d , O r e g o n 972UX-
GeorgiaF&cific
Growing Forests Forever
Refresh inants w ill be served
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