” y NR tes nips. inant wi i exclaim: against that!” if you'll look it up; | ~ SECTION A — PAGE 2° There Usually Is In nearly évery case when You “There ought to be a law you'll find that there is. Pleasure must succeed to plea- sure else past pleasure turn pain. Young. essa RUN THE MAN DOWN TO THE YOUNG MEN’S SHOP'S SALE © 42 MAIN ST., DALLAS Open FRIDAY NIGHT ’Til 9 Applying For Social Security? Maybe This Will Help You THE DALLAS POST, | her age and marriage if she is near | or past 62 yeafs of age If she has | a child under 18 in her eare, she THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1960 ‘Corp. John Billow ‘Was State Trooper | should bring her own marriage cer- | tificate and proof of the child’s age. | She should also bring a copy of her | Are you going to apply for social | 18, bring proof of that child's age husband's W-2 Form for the year security retirement or survivors | benefits soon? If you are, you can | by Christopher G. Boland, Manager | of the Wilkes Barre District Office | | of the Social Security Administra- | tion. 1. If you worked as an srloren in 1959, bring a copy of your W-2 Form, Withholding Statement. 2. If you were self-employed in { 1959, bring a receipt or cancelled check showing that you paid your | income tax and social security tax | for 1959. Also, bring a copy of your { 1959 income tax return which will | be retained as part of your appli- | cation for benefits. | 8. If you have as proof of your | age a birth certificate, baptismal | certificate, ‘or old government or | business record such as a census | record, army discharge certificate, | insurance policy, etc., bring it with | you. | 4. If you have a child under age { 18 or a child who was continuously disabled since before reaching age | with you as supplementary family | | benefits may be possible for such to get quicker results if you act on|a child. | the suggestions listed below made | 5. If you have a wife who has in her care a child eligible for bene- fits on your account, or if your wife is age 62, she should accompany | you to the Social Security Office as she also may be eligible for bene- | fits on your account. If she is near or past 62 years of age, she should bring proof of her age also. Boland pointed out that any | worker who is of retirement age (age 65 for men and age 62 for women) may be eligible for some social security benefit if the total earnings for the year do not ex- ceed $2080.00. Also, a worker who is not self-employed may receive a benefit for any month in which he does not earn over $100.00. At age 72, a worker may receive retire: ment benefits no matter how much he earns. Boland also stated that if a work- er or self-employed person dies, and the widow is applying for benefits; she should bring with her proof of 1959 if it is available. | Requiem Mass For Stephen Sabol Stephen Sabol, Dallas DR 3, taken to General Hospital Friday morning | in the Dallas Community Ambu- lance, died there that same night. [4 was buried in Mt. Olivet Ceme- tery Tuesday morning, following a ‘mass of requim at St. | Church. He retired three years ago from the Glen Alden Corporation’s Wood- ward Colliery. After moving to Dal- St. Michael's Greek Catholic Church in Pittston. ; Mr. Sabol was a native of Edwardsville, son of the late John in Edwardsville schools. He leaves his wife; Anna Kapral; John and George,’ Edwardsville; Andrew, Nanticoke; Nicholas, Wilkes-Barre; Paul, Luzerne; a sister Mrs. Andrew Chacko, West Wyo- ming; three grandchildren. Michael’s | | las RD 3, he retained membership at and Mary Sabol, and was educated | a son Francis, Dallas RD 3; brothers, | Corp. John Billow, 50, resident of Chase Manor for the past two months after moving to this area | from Luzerne, died at Wyoming | Barracks early Sunday morning, | after suffering a severe heart attack. | He had been a State Trooper for | twenty- -seven years, joining the ranks in his early twenties. He will be buried Thursday morn- | ing in Forty Fort Cemetery, follow- | ing a mass of requim at St. Vladi- | mir’s «Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Edwardsville. Corp. Billow took his preliminary | police training at Hershey, and was assigned to Bethlehem Barracks, transferring to Wyoming Barracks in 1938. He saw duty at Tunkhan- nock and Shickshinny substations. While. at Wyoming he was garage inspector for many years. He leaves his widow, the former Margaret Hretciv; two daughters: Mrs. Joseph Voitek, Luzerne; and Magdaline, a senior at Mansfield State College; one grandchild; and his mother, Mrs. Mary Billow, at home. Sir Walter Raleigh wrote a His- tory of the World, while imprisoned in the Tower of London. — SPECIAL CHI Er The HOTEL STERLING SERVING SUNDAY NOON TO 8 P. M., DINNER Complete Choice of Entrees LDREN'S MENU — FINE For a True Adventure in Don't Miss — Hotel Sterling’s SATURDAY NIGHT SMORGASBORD e Served Penna. Dutch Style ~All you can eat — $2.50. DINING Children, Y; Price TR ae West Market Street, WILKES-BARRE AT EVERY LADY LOVES DINNER Gus Genetti HOTEL and MOTEL BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOMS COCKTAIL LOUNGE We Speciaize in a large Variety Seafood FOR RESERVATIONS: GL 4-2494 Route 309 Hazleton-W.-B. Highway Hotel DINING AT THE HOTEL REDINGTON Chef Carmen’s Greatest Reward is your complete enjoyment! Bedingion ON VALENTINE'S DAY RE-DISCOVER THE ART OF SATURDAY NIGHT TAKE YOUR |, VALENTINE TO i VIC-MAR’S i (12-614 Main St. EDWARDSVILLE “Famous Sea Food Restaurant’ ALL YOU CAN EAT! HARD SHELL CRABS = $1.25 JUMEOS 50c — LARGE 40c MEDIUM 25¢ — 4 FOR $1.00 S-P-E-C-I-A-L TAKE ours 7 rr *1.00 ALSO, BALTIMORE STYLE ALL YOU CAN EAT! FRESH PINK Shrimp rr *1.25 JUMBO COCKTAILS $1.00 FRIED PLATTER $1.25 S-P-E-C-I-A-L TAKE Freshly OUTS $1.00 BAG 100 tind FOR $1.50 iE H-O-T DINNERS 11 A. M. 'TIL ’ 2 A. M. EVERY DAY CHOICE BEERS, WINES, LIQUORS and MIXED DRINKS (AETV VELVET VET TET heart's desire 207 VAUGHN ST. ti hep vo A Delicious TREAT | To EATI TAKE HER TO ... MARIN'S SERVING FROM 12 NOON SUNDAY ‘DAILY FROM 5 P. M. “Every Meal A Gormet Masterpiece” At Reasonable Prices BU 8-0456 LUZERNE DIXON'S RESTRnANT The Perfect Spot Gi Seep TREAT YOUR VALENTINE S Full Course Dinner SERVED SUNDAY 11:30 A.M. — 9 P.M. SPECIAL FOR CHILDREN Yowll Always Meet Your Friends At DIXON'S OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE PRICES SUNDAY DINNER Your LOVE will love of af THE TOP H AT IN Rn SUNDAY DINNERS Roast Fresh Ham, Dressing, Apple Sauce Roast Oklahoma Turkey, Giblet Gravy Virginia Baked Ham, Fresh Currant Sauce Roast Leg of Spring Lamb, Mint Jelly Broiled Prime Delmonica Steak Roast Top Sirloin of Beef, Natural Gravy Plus 22 Other Delicious Entrees From Which to Choose Above Prices Are For Full Course Dinners and Include: Soup or Juice; Salad; Entree; Potatoes; Vegetable; Dessert; Beverage $1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 2.25 1.75 ovens, a steady stream of Girl Scout cookies, down at the Blue | Ribbon Cake Company in Kingston. Many have already been sold by brown-clad Brownies with pixie hats, and green-clad Girl Scouts wearing yellow scarves, but there are plenty more. Be generous when the cookie salesman rings your doorbell. It's in a good cause. This is Brownie Troop 108, visit- Here they come, fresh from the|ing the bakery in advance of the sale which started last weekend. Yearning over the cookies in the front . row, reading from left to right, are Paula® Artmont, Virginia Block, « Christine Dixon, Christine Baloga, Sandra Sedler, Shirley Brown, Susan Owens, Shirley Reese, Nancy Ziegenfus, Pamela Sabol, Beth Ann McCarty, Debbie Hart- man, Lucy Fleming. Second row: Diane Schweiss, Sally ~~ LEGAL NOTICES — SHERIFF SALE FRIDAY MARCH 11, 1960 at 10 o'clock A. M. By virtue of a writ of Fi. Fa No. 62 January Term 1960, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale, by vendue or outcry to the highest and best bidders, for cash, in Court Room No. 1, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne Coun- ty, Pennsylvania, on Friday, March 11, 1960 at ten o'clock A. M., in the forenoon of the said day, all the right, title and interest of the de- fendent’s in and to— ALL those two certain pieces or parcels of land situate in the Town- ship of Lake, Luzerne County, Penn- sylvania; Wounded and described as follows: THE FIRST THEREOF: BEGINNING at a corner between lots Nos. 6 and 7 in line of land of A. N. Biery; THENCE along the line dividing said lots North 32 degrees West 100 feet to a corner between lots Nos. 6 and 7 in the South line of Lewis Avenue; THENCE along said Lewis Avenue North 54 degrees "30 minutes East 40 feet to a corner of lots Nos. 7 and 8; THENCE along line between lots Nos. 7 and 8 South 32 degrees East 100 feet to a line of land formerly of Myron Williams; THENCE South 54 degrees 30 minutes West 40 feet to the place of beginning. BEING Jot No. 7 on plot of lots laid out by Edward and Katherine Gaynor. IMPROVED with a single 1%-story frame dwelling. THE SECOND THEREOF: .... BEGINING at a corner on the Northerly side of Lewis Avenue at the corner of lot No. 17; THENCE along the Westerly line of lot No. 17 North 32 degrees 15 minutes West 105.68 feet more or less to land now. or late of Edward Gaynor et ux; THENCE along land of said Gaynors South 57 degrees 45 min- utes West 49.92 feet to a corner of lot No. 15; THENCE along line of Jot No. 15 South 32 degrees 15 minutes East 106.28 feet more or less to a corner on the Northerly side of Lewis - Avenue; THENCE North 54 degrees 45 minutes East 50 feet to the place of beginning. BEING lot No. 16 on plot of lots of Edward Goynor et ux aforesaid. IMPROVED with a 1- story concrete block garage. BEING the same property con- veyed to Murray G. Traver and Margaret Traver, his wife, by Floyd K. Ely et ux by deed dated Oct. 12, 1956, recorded in Luzerne County in Deed Book Vol. 1331, page 264. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of Harvey Kitchen and Clara S. Kitchen vs. Murray G. Traver & Margaret Traver, and will be sold by JOSEPH MOCK, Sheriff B. B. Lewis, Attorney ESTATE OF NELLIE G. LOFTUS, (Died Dec. 22, 1959) late of Kings- ton Borough. Letters Testamentary having been granted, all persons indebted to said Estate are request- ed to make payment and those having claims to present same to ‘DANIEL F. LOFTUS, EXECUTOR, 155 E. Oak St., Browntown, Pittston Twp., Pittston, Pa. JONATHAN C. VALENTINE and B. TODD MAGUIRE, ATTYS. NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that the Realty Transfer Tax Ordinance in effect during the year 1959 which imposed a tax of 1% on sales in- volving the transfer of title of real estate located in the Township of Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsyl- vania, has been reenacted by the Supervisors of the Township of Kingston without substantial change, and the same tax imposed for the year 1960. In accordance with the Act of June 25, 1947, P. L. 1145 as amended, the tax is now paid by the trasferor and is fo be paid regardless of whether or not any part of the transaction take place in the Township of Kingston. LaRoy Ziegler, secretary NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that letters Testamentary have been granted in the Estate of Thomas W. Smith, late of Nanticoke, (died December 9, 1959. All persons in- debted to said estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the Execu- trixes, Mildred Schaefer and Jea- nette Ridout, 262 East Noble Street, Nanticoke, Pa. T. G. WADZINSKI, Attorney 802 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. NOTICE IS HEREBY (GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have been granted in' the Estate of Harry Alexander McAdams, deceased, late of Dallas Borough, (died July 2, 1959), to Ethel McAdams, 235 Huntsville Road, Dallas, Pa. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims are directed to present the same without delay to the Executrix above named. Robert L. Fleming, Attorney-at-Law, 807 Miners Nat'l Bank Bldg, Wilkes- Barre, Pa. DALLAS TOWNSHIP TAX ORDINANCE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Dallas Township Ordinance = No. 1959-1, levying and assessing a per capita tax of Three Dollars ($3.00) per person upon residents of Dallas Township, has been reenacted with- out substantial change and the same tax has been imposed for the year 1960. Dallas Township Supervisors By: William Krimmel, Secretary Frank Townend, Solicitor DALLAS TOWNSHIP TAX ORDINANCE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Dallas Township Ordinance No. 1959-2, levying a tax of Two Dollars ($2.00) per month on house trailers in Dallas Township, has been reen- acted without substantial change and the same tax has been imposed for the year 1960. Dallas Township Supervisors By: William Krimmel, Secretary Frank Townend, Solicitor NOTICE: The proposed budget for 1960 will be available for public inspection at the home of’ the Sec- retary for Twenty (20) days begin- ning with February 13th, 1960. Lake Township Board of Supervisors Otto A. Biery, Secretary BUDGET NOTICE The 1960 Budget of the Board of Supervisors of Lehman Township is now prepared and available for in- spection for a period of twenty days at the home of the secretary Alan S. Major. DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Girl Scout Cookies Roll Off The Assembly Line Ziegenfus, Sue Schlesinger, Jane Gallagher, Anne Gallagher, Sally Holvey, Diane Seymore, Mary Ann McCue. : Back row: Mrs. Robert Brown, assistant leader; Mrs. William Kel- ley, leader; Mrs. Daniel McCue, Mrs. Samuel Holvey, Mary Ann Baloga, and Mrs. Stephen Hartman. These are the mothers who supplied trans- portation. This Week AT THE COLLEGE By PAM ROCH Today at the college we're elect- ing Miss Glamour of College Miseri- cordia, our campus represenf ive for the national Miss Glamour ‘Con- test. This contest in sponsored by Glamour magazine, which devotes its August issue to the “Ten Best Dressed College Girls in America.” These ten girls are selected from among the entries of most colleges in the United States, on the basis of posture, grooming, and fashion sense. These criteria are sought in the three photos of each contestant: one in typical campus outfit, an- other in off-campus outfit, and a third in a party dress. Our nominees for campus Miss Glamour are Jane Ruble, Meg Com- stock, Pat Byrne, Linda Gennaro, Peggy Kirwin, Beth Turnbach, Glo- ria Galante, Eleanor Gallo, Judy MacNally, and Maureen Fortune. Tomorrow the freshmen student nurses of Mercy Hospital will re- ceive their caps. The capping cere- mony will take place at '8 pm. at St. Aloysius Church in Wilkes-Barre. : On Saturday, the senior rr tion students will take the Na%#nal Teacher Examination! On 'the fourteenth, ‘don’t’ iss “The Devil and Daniel Webst NBC ‘at 8 p.m. The Monday performance by the Chicago Opera Ballet will ring down the curtain on this season’s Theatre Three. Misericordians are looking forward to Monday night’s program hoping for another’ Theatre Three next year! The music students, members of Phi Mu Gamma, will attend a lec- ture on = Wednesday at 7 pm. in Regina Hall. Miss Margaret O’Brien, of the English department,will dis- cuss her European travel last sum- mer, centering her talk around the Music Festivals presented through- out the continent. Miss M. Corgan, of the langgsage department will show her slid hoof France at the: Modern Leagues club meeting, February 18, 7:304° in Regina Hall. The Modern guage Club will wets gaat Lamoreaux Heads Board Elmer Laskowski was elected chairman of Jackson Township Supervisors at the reorganization meeting. Wesley Lamoreaux is road foreman, Harold Bertram super- visor, Atty Jonathan Valentine solicitor, Edward Jeffery secretary- treasurer; Dennis Bonning chief of police; Robert Cooper assistant chief. It was voted to retain all town- ship ordinances for 1960. Billy Wilson, Oldest Stone Mason, Marks Eighty-Seventh Milestone ,. 'A lifelong resident and one of the best known stone masons in the Back Mountain Region, William “Billy” Wilson observed his eighty- seventh birthday anniversary quiet- ly Monday at his home on Franklin street surrounded by members of his family and a few old friends, ‘| who dropped in to talk over the “old days.” Among them were his three: sis- ters, Mrs. Della White, Noxen; Mrs. Ellen Deater and Mrs. Milo Oney, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wilson Sweet Valley and Milo Oney. Born in Lake Township where he grew to manhood, Mr. Wilson was one of a family of thirteen child- ren, eleven of whom grew to ma- turity. He early learned the trade of bricklayer and stone mason, a trade he has followed until just recently. Among some of his work to which he turns with great pride is the beautiful retaining wall and en- trance to the Newberry Estate on Pioneer. He also did all of the stone- work and walls at Wildwood, Har- veys Lake, the Girl Scout i Camp formerly owned by the Weckesser family. In 1900 Mr. Wilson married the former Eleanor Walter from whose father, the late John Walter, he had learned his trade. In May Mr. and Mrs. Wilson will celebrate their sixtieth wedding anniversary. The Wilsons have two children who are living, John of Charleston, West Virginia, and Gertrude of Dal- las. A son, Walter, died while a prisoner of the Japanese in the Philippines during World War. The Wilsons also have two great- grandsons, one of whom, Johnny, makes his home with them and is the idol of grandpap Billy’s eye. Earlier The disastrous orgy of gambling taught America such a lesson that everybody is determined to get out earlier next time. Your Classified Ad Goes To 8,700 Homes ry i BB yr PR — hl a’ rd ~ = In rd ord EO or ry ®- RE SR
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers