Put your shoes on tomorrow without socks and go Links of London Sale your day and see how that feels. We can look the other way when we see someone begging on the streets. We can enjoy the warmth we feel in our beds tonight because we have covers and heat to keep us warm. We can also follow God's commandment to love one another and reach into our closets for coats that we don't wear, blankets we don't use, gloves that never go on our hands and socks that never leave our drawers. These items do not have to be new, just clean. You can either bring them this week to Ben Avon Baptist Church on Wallace Road during the hours of 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. or contact me at 585-6218, and I will pick them up."QUIPS CHARLTON HALL of Boiling Springs: "Gasoline prices have risen more than 30 cents per gallon since November. Aren't we glad we elected a Links of London Necklaces crop of Republicans?"ODDS AND ENDS: The second annual Christmas sale going on through Friday at Pat Anderson's Law Office in Spartanburg will offer some unique Christmas ornaments, wreaths, trees, jewelry and gifts made by local artists, all being sold at prices to fit your budget. Shopping hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, and you'll find the office at 130 Archer St., which runs between North Church and Magnolia streets.It was 25 years ago, on Dec. 11, 1985, that Rita R. Kimball was crossing Oxford Street in the rain after a prayer meeting at St. Joseph's Church in Auburn. The driver of a car never saw her until it was too late. She died an hour later.On the anniversary of her death every year since, her daughter, Donna J. Galeckas of Oxford, has sent a donation to the Telegram & Gazette Santa Fund in her mother's memory."It was just a terrible accident. The boy who hit her felt awful and did everything he could. He called for help right away. Links of London Raindance Earrings Mom died, she already had all her Christmas shopping done. Christmas was big for her. I know she would want to help children, so I started donating to the Gazette Santa in her memory," Mrs. Galeckas said.Since 2003, the year her father Vitie A. "Butch" Kimball died, she has added his name to the donation.Mr. Kimball was a foreman in the gear-cutting department at Crompton & Knowles Corp., before retiring in 1976. A U.S. Army veteran of World War II, he served in Japan and Hawaii, and was a member of the Chester P. Tuttle Post American Legion.Mrs. Galeckas said that her father was devoted to her mother."At the end, Dad was home on hospice care when Father Charles Monroe of Our Lady of the Angels told him he'd been mourning my mother for 18 years, and she was waiting for him to join her. He passed away the next morning."Mrs. Galeckas said she lives with her husband, Stephan Galeckas at 40 Links of London Raindance Necklace Ave. in Oxford, but still feels closely attached to Auburn, and even has a brick from the old Auburn High School and enjoys seeing the cupola, which was preserved and sits near the new Auburn High School."I graduated from Auburn in 1965.
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