(Grade Exhibits ‘evenings from 7 to 9 on the fol- by Arch Austin, Supervisor of Ele- ” Story Book Friends; ' “Learning in Fourth Grade;” » ‘Special class, Miss Helen Ander- son, a the firemen. “oe 72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Oldest Business Institution Back of the Mountain HE DALLAS POST \ TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers ORchard 4-5656 OR 4-7676 hE TEN CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGES Public Will See Dallas Schools’ Teachers And Pupils Busily Prepare For Annual Exhibition April is ‘a busy month in elemen- tary schools of Dallas School Dis- trict and will reach its climax with the annual school exhibits beginning next Wednesday at Dallas Township Elementary School and continuing at intervals in the other buildings until almost the end of the month. Exhibits will be open to the public lowing schedule: Dallas Township Elementary Building, Wednesday, April 12; Dallas Borough Elementary and Kindergarten, Monday, April 17; Shavertown Elementary, Mon- day, April 17; Trucksville Elemen- tary, Thursday, April 20. ‘Growing in popularity each year, last year’s exhibits were attended by hundreds of parents and friends. The project themes as announced ‘mentary Education, and Mrs. Dor- othy H. Withey, Supervisor of Art, is as follows: Dallas Township Elementary School John J. Mulhern, head teacher. ‘Grade 1—Mrs Thelma Lamor- eux, “We Work and Play With Grade 1—Miss Evelyn Everard, “Farm Fun;” Grade 2—Miss “Dinosaurs;” Grade 2—Miss Helen Guyler, “The American Indians;” Grade 3—Miss Alice Yaple, “Trav- elling in Alaska;” Grade 3—Mrs. Dorothy Henney, “Beneath the Sea;” Grade 4—Mrs. Sarah Mitten, “Man’s Progress Toward Space;” Veronica Mills, Grade 4—John J. Mulhern, “The World of Plants;” Grade | 5—Mrs. Bette Thomas, “Birds at Home;” Grade 5—Miss Hilde Bredbenner, “The Climates of the World;” Grade 6—Mrs. Frede Hughey, “The Wonderful Worlds at our Door- step; Grade 6—Mrs. Mary Emmanuel, “Border Neighbors;” Dallas Borough Elementary School Mrs. Louise Colwell, principal. Grade 1—Mrs Marlene Holly, “The World Around Us;” Grade 1—Mrs. Arline Rood, With the Bears;” Grade 2—Mrs. Antoinette Mason, “We Visited an Apple Orchard;” Grade 2—Mrs. Grace Fleming, “Hilltop Community Helpers;” Grade 3—Miss Cornelia Davis, “Our Earth;” Grade 4—Mrs. Mary Mohr, “How a City Grew;” Grade 4—Mrs. “Fun Louise Colwell, Grade 5—Mrs. Margaret Hughes, “Fraction Carnival;”’ Grade 6—Mrs. Oce Austin, ‘“Part- ners in Progress;”’ Kindergarten Classes Mrs. Hannah James, ‘‘Spring;” Mrs Ruth Ambrose, “Spring;”’ ‘Miss Vernette Butts, “Nursery Rhymes;” Mrs. Manta Steele, “Spring.” “A Mexican Market.” Shavertown Elementary School James H. Goodwin, principal. Grade 1—Mrs. Katharine Scott, “The Store;” Grade 1—Mrs. Rita McGuiness, “The Family;” Grade 2—Mrs. Edythe Kromel- bein, “General Exhibit;” Grade 2—Miss Bertha “Fun During the Season;”’ Grade 3—Mrs. Rachel Porter, “In- dian Life;” Grade 4—Mrs Ruth Novy, “Class- room Activities; Grade 4-Miss Marcella Nagoski, “India and General Exhibits;” Grade 5—Joseph Park, “The Col- onial Period;” Grade 6—James “Latin America.” Trucksville Elementary School Miss Adaline Burgess, principal. Grade 1—Miss Adaline Burgess, “The Seasons;” Grade 2—Mrs. Eva McGuire, “Highlights in Primary Science;” Grade 3—Miss Georgiena Weid- Sutliff, H. Goodwin, ner, “Man's Use of Simple Ma- chines;” Grade 3—Miss Mary Fleming, “Space and Space Travel;” Grade 4—Miss Marian Young, ‘Our. Pennsylvania, the Keystone State;” j Grade 5—Mrs. Arline Trimble, “The Agricultural and Industrial South;” Grade 5—W alter Prokopchak, ‘Growth of Transportation;” Grade 6—Mrs. Margaret Garris “Latin American Neighbors.” Buy Festival Rides Unable to rent equipment for its Festival in July, Jonathan Davis Fire Company has purchased an airplane ride, an auto ride and a whip for children up to 12. The three rides are motor driven and are being re- conditioned and brightened up by | zens. | aims and goals of the association of | Junior Deputies, stressing the well- Methodist Church, were into the organization of impressive ceremonial. cation, in the picture a are Jhese cubs: Tuesday was a big day for Dallas Cub Scouts of' Pack 281. Not only were they excused from school for the morning, but they drove to Wilkes-Barre to be inducted as Jun- ior Deputy Sheriffs at Luzerne County Court House, had their pic- tures taken, and came back to Dallas, fully fledged Junior Deputies, sworn to uphold the law. Fifty-three Cubs in uniform were sworn in by Judge Edward Lopatto, assisted by Sheriff Joseph E. Mock and Deputy Sheriff Lee Welker. Leo Garvey presented each Cub with membership card and badge. Warden William B. Healey joined Judge Lopatto and Sheriff Mock in impressing upon the boys the im- portance of being law abiding citi- SHEE Mokk “explained the | known fact that very few boys allied with such organizations as Boy Scouts or Junior Deputies, ever run afoul of the law. A tour of Luzerne County Prison followed the - cere- monies. : Accompanying the Cubs were Cub- master Wilson Maury, and den- mothers, Mrs. Ralph Fitch, Mrs. Donald Bulford, Mrs. Robert Hale, Mrs. John Betz, Mrs. John Churry, and Mrs. Kenneth Young. Transportation was provided by Mrs. George Dobson, Mrs. Robert Block, Mrs. Harry Lefko, Mrs. Gray- don Mayer, Mrs. John Grant, Mrs. Wilson Maury, Mrs. Kenneth Young, Mrs. Victor Cross, Mrs. Robert Hale, and Mrs. Joseph Goode. At Windham ROBERT C. RINEHIMER JR. Robert C. Reinhimer, Jr, eight members from thirteen states_ He book, radio program, and drama club staffs, president of the Radio Club and secretary of the Drama Club. He plans to enter the uation. Motor-Boat Licenses according to an announcement by | the Pennsylvania Fish Commission. Day said the extension is beng | . Pride Fifty-three Cub Scouts of Troop |Charles Baker, 281, meeting each week at Dallas Michael Betz, “inducted ' Scott Blase, Thomas Bottoms, Allan | Junior E. Brown, Douglas Bulford, John B. Deputy Sheriffs last Tuesday morn- | | Cathrall, Donald Chamberlain, Craig | ing at 10 at Luzerne County Court’ Stephen Churry, Raymond E. Cross, | LaBar, Timothy LaBar, House by Judge Edward Lopato in David G. Dobson, Impossible of row by row identifi- | ris, MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Cub Scouts Take Oath Of Junior Deputy Sheriff Thomas Balutis, Drew Bittenbender, Clifford L. Gar ris, David Thomas | Lefko, Eric Mayer, Fitch, John Fleming} Charles E. Gar- | John McClary, James Miller, Fred | Priebe, Jr. and John Sauder. Howard L. GL. Parry, Goode, John Grant, Bucky Hale, Douglas P. Hess, Alan C. Heycock, Robert Huttman, David C. Jones, Robert Katyl Robert A. Kelley, Billy | Kingsbury, Caddie LaBar, Donald H. Scott | Roger Maury, | Robert Pattison, James | Garris, Joseph. D. Goode, S even M. Peiffer, Carl H. Remley, J. William Fifty-Three Dallas Cub Scouts Sworn In As Jr. Deputy Sheriffs | Wilkes-Barre | | | son of | Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rinehimer, Sr., | East Forty-second Street, is a fresh- | Conventicn Hall in the spring of man at Wildham College in Ver- | 1963. Foreign nations are being con- mont, majoring in Economics and tacted for exhibits, as well as all 50 Marketing in a class of seventy- | | States of the Union. is on the newspaper, year- | field of | Economics or Politics upon grad- | Concert Drive Ends April 15 Admission Only By Membership Annual Membership Campaign of Community Concert Association will end Saturday, April 15th, according to announcement by Mrs. Ray W.- Turner, Dallas, Presi- dent. of the Association. The cam- paign for renewals” and new mem- | berships is now going on under the diz ection of Mrs. John L. Bennett, | Kingston, Membership Chytfach. The annual Campaign Dinner will be held at the Twin Grill, South ! Main. Street, Wilkes-Barre, Monday night, when final details will be worked out. Heading the list of great artists will be Rudolf Serkin, internation- ally famous concert pianist, making | his first visit to Wyoming Valley. Also making its first visit will be Detroit Symphony Orchestra with Paul Paray conducting. Advance reports indicate that the Detroit Symphony is now one of the great orchestras of the world. Two other concert attractions are still to be determined. Mrs. Bennett points out that attendance is by membership only. No single box office admissions are sold to any of the concerts, since the artists who appear in the series are selected on the basis of the mem- bership enrollment now underway. Last season’s concert series was a complete sell-out, since the size of the Irem Temple auditorium limits the membership to. approximately 1,500. Mrs. Robert Casselberry is chair- man of the Back Mountain Area, assisted by these captains and work- ers: Mesdames Don F. Innes, Ray Turner, Jr., Eugene Gilmartin, Mer- ton Jones, Albert Turner, Robert Lewis, Elliott Perego, Charles Beach, Thomas Graham, Royal Culp, Paul | McCormick, John Zorzi; Oliver, Carl Coates. Westmoreland Girls To Sing In State Chorus NANCY WOLFE Two girls from Westmoreland High School will sing in the Region | II State Chorus in Shillington this weekend, when 200 members chosen from 150 high schools in the region will rehearse for a concert on Sat- urday which will be open to the public. Today, tomorrow, and Saturday, members of the Chorus will gather from all over this region, among them Nancy Wolfe and Betty Jean Davis. Both girls sang in the District Chorus for Northeastern . Pennsyl- vania March 9, 10, and 11, at Clark’s Summit, where individual singers were given individual tryouts for eligibility for the State Chorus. Nancy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wolfe, Dallas, is a senior. Musical activities include both chorus and band. She has had pri- vate instruction in voice and piano for a number of years, and plans to’ |Bichands, Jeff Richards, William A. {| Rowett, Scott R. Staffian George | Block, James Smith, Robert Snyder, | Michael Vitale, Dick Whitlock, Theodore Wright, William Yarnal, | Bruce E. Young, Damon Young, | Chuck LaBerge, Billy Dorn, Paul photo by Kozemchak BETTY JEAN DAVIS continue her music at Mansfield State Teachers College. She sang last year in the State Chorus which was held at Kingston High School. Betty Jean Davis, daughter of Mrs. Alice Davis and the late Samuel Davis, is a junior at Westmoreland. She, also, has had private voice in- struction, and has sung in the Edwardsville Eisteddfod. She comes of a family richly endowed with sing- |ing ability. Her father was a well known singer, and a brother sings with the Navy. Miss Louise 'Ohlman, Westmore- {land instructor in vocal music, will | attend the concert. Heward Hendricks, a former supervising principal of Lehman Schools, is supervising principal of Governor Mifflin Schools in Shilling- ton where the rehearsals and concert { will take place in the high school . building. Daddow-Isaacs Post To Honor Westmoreland Team At Dinner Daddow-Isaacs Post 672 and Auxiliary will entertain the cham- Richard | | girls, and cheerleaders of Westmore- | Moran, | land High’ School, at a banquet Mon- | Those interested in securing mem- | day, April 17, at 6:30 p- m. {berships are urged to visit the cam- | ! paign headquarters at the First appointed the following committee: | North | gd Buckley, Tom Reese, Co-Chair- Methodist Church House, Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, or to) contact one of the volunteer-work- | a ers. Robert Stafford of the New | York office of Community Concerts | will be in the area during the week of April 10th. Show For Spring, 1963 Philadelphia Travel and Vacation | Show is scheduled April 19-28 at Potenttial = exhibitors | sporting gcods firms, | distributors, travel agencies, histor- i cial and sports groups, and all allied industries. Thirty At Fire School Thirty members of Jonathan | Davis Fire Company are attending | the State Fire School conducted [Gers Tuesday night at the com- | pany’s fire hall. Classes are con- 1960 motorboat license tags will | ducted by instructors from the State be honored until April 10, 1961, Department of Public Instruction. Albert M. Day, executive director of | 'Scheol Reimbursement Dallas School District will obtain allowed because the normal éxpira- | reimbursement from the State dur- tion day, March 31, fell on Good | ing April of $206,570.29, for the | second half of the school year, 2 / include; mobile home | Commander Bill O’Brien has Wilbur man, James Davenport, Henning and George Cave, Chefs, Barnard McDermott, Bill Brien and | | Goddard, Robert Rebennack, Fred | | pionship Basketball team, boys and | Lew Reese,” entertainment; Bill TALK ON DOGS | TOMORROW FOR BENEFIT OF SPCA Don’t pass mp the trained poodles tomorrow night at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church par- ish house, when Blanche Saun- ders, authority on dogs, will talk for benefit of the Humane Association. Tickets may be purchased at the door. People who have seen the poodles in action say that they are price- less. Trappers Took 2.410 Beavers Carl Stainbrook, Game Commis- sioner for the thirteen-county Northeast District of Pennsylvania, reports a harvest of 2410 beaver pelts during the season that closed March 19. In 1959, the take was 1926; last year, with frigid March temperatures to , discourage trap- ping, only 1296 pelts were regis- tered Quotas rose this year from 5 per trapper, to 7. In Luzerne County, 218 beavers were trapped; in Wyoming County, 182; in Susquehanna, 264. At Lake Louise, the beaver dam was dynamited by the Game Com- mission immediately after the sea- son closed, in an attempt to eliminate a nuisance of long standing. Beavers, says Mr. Stainbrook, are not an unmixed blessing. During the heyday of the lumber industry’s assault upon the green hills of Pennsylvania, lands suitable for beaver breeding were laid waste, and the run-off during spring fresh- ets was disastrous. From 1903 to 1934, beavers were on the protected list, in an effort to bring back con- servation of soil and natural water- ways high in the hills. Beavers, though protected, became extinct. In 1917, beavers were im- ported from Canada. Little by little, they increased, built their dams in remote spots, and helped keep back the seasonal spring run-off. By 1934, with beaver dams pos- ing a problem to farmers and road builders, trappers were permitted to take two beavers during a short open season. f The limit gradually increased. Beavers, though handsomely cos- tumed in a heavy fur that used to be much in demand for fur coats, and highly industrious, have become a prime pest. The country can’t get along without them, and it can't get along with them. Resettling of colonies by the Game Commission does littie good. Beavers go where they want to go, and their sharp teeth have destroyed many a mountain property. Roads are flooded, and land along the beaver dam areas shows a forest of un- pleasantly gnawed tree stubs. Though beavers have 290,000 acres of State Game Land in North- eastern Pennsylvania, where dams are welcome, and help hold back the spring freshets, beavers seek out private property for their engineer- ing projects. Around Harveys Lake, at Cease- town, at Beaumont, and in the more remote regions of Red Rock, beavers are flourishing. The ‘Game Commission dynamites the beaver dams when the beavers become too energetic. The beavers come back and the dam rises again. . Mr. Stainbrook says beavers are fine conservationists, but that most folks prefer to have their engineer- ing skill employed on somebody else's property. Fashion note: beaver is not as popular for fur coats as it once was. A good beaver skin used to bring $80. It now brings $20, with luck. . . but a beaver coat costs just as much as'it ever did. It’s the labor. Dick A Staub, Wayne King, Len Harvey, Awards, Les Fink, Dick (Fuller, Tom Kane, Tom Templin, | | arrangements. A meeting of the committee will | | be held Friday, April 7, 1961 at 8 | Pp m, for final plans for the affair. Junior High School Students Will Commemorate Fall of Fort Sumpter Two days before the one hun- dredth anniversary ofs the Fall of | Fort Sumpter in Charleston Harbor | on April 12, 1861, Howard Risley, a member of the Back Mountain Civil War Round Table, will speak on the opening of the Civil War at the student assembly of Dallas Junior High School on Monday afternoon. Mr. Risley will discuss the causes leading up to the rebellion and the opening phases, when for a time it was uncertain whether the popula- tion of Washington, a southern city, would remain loyal to the Union. I He will discuss the part played | during those fateful days by Penn- sylvania under the leadership of her great wartime governor, Andrew Gregg Curtin and the response of Wyoming = Valley County to Lincoln's call for volun- teers. Incidents relating to Wyoming Valley's own 143rd regiment during | its first day at Gettysburg when it fought in line with the famed Iron Brads) and Bucktailed Tl and Luzerne! land the charge by the Louisiana conclude the talk, | Breaks Ankle In Woods Carried Out On Litter A 43 year old visitor to Meadow- crest from ILeavittown, N. J., carried for a mile through brush and was over rocks on a litter Wednesday, afternoon, after breaking her ankle while: walking in the woods with a group of children. Mrs. Nellie Con- drack, visiting her sister, Mrs. Albert | Marchetti, was admitted to Nesbitt Hospital for X-Rays at 5:30. Kingston Township ambulance | | was able to approach the scene only | | through Nick Staub’s field, far from | | the site of the mishap. Staffing the ambulance were crewman Frederick, Long, Yeust, and chief-of-police. Her- hers Updyke, ; | Tigers on the second day at Gettys- | brug against the Battery of Col. ! Robert Bruce Ricketts, the man for | who Rickett’s Glen was named, will | | treated. E.R. Kerlin Admitted . To Hospital At Cresson Friends of E. R. “Kerlin, Kunkle | Methodist Sunday School superin- | tendent for many years, may write | to him at the Lawrence Flick State Hospital at Cresson, where he has | been a patient in Ward X for two | weeks. Mr. Kerlin, suffering a stubborn chest cold, was for a time a patient at Tyler Memorial Hospital in Me- | shoppen. A lung condition was diag- nosed, and arrangements made for | him to enter sanitarium at Cresson. New Store Progressing Many of the new fixtures for Sheldon Cave’s new store at Idetown have arrived and will be installed next week. Mr. Cave and his son, Jack, expect to have the store ready for opening early in May. Injures Forehead In Fall At Home Jay Buckingham, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Buckingham, Lehman Avenue, against the lavatory in his home. Memorial Hospital where he was received a cut above, the ! eye which required three stitches to "its benefactor Albert G. Davis on close Monday night when he fell {July 2. Among those who will take His mother and Donald Weidner, ' Jones, their neighbor, took Jay to Nesbitt ‘Congressman. Daniel Flood, Judge | VOL 73, NO. 14, PTA Honors For Mrs. John Girvan Was Founder Of Township PTA MRS. JOHN GIRVAN Mrs. John Girvan, Lake Street, founder of Dallas ‘Township PTA thirty-one years ago, received an honorary life membership in the Pennsylvania Congress of Parents and Teachers at the March 23 meet- ing of Dallas Township PTA. The honor, with its accompanying en- graved oak-leaf gold pin, was to have been given in February, with a special program of acknowledge- ment, but a blizzard cancelled out the ceremony. In a letter accompanying the award, were these words: ‘This award is made to those individuals who have performed outstanding service in any field related to Par- ent-Teacher activity. Much thought is given to selection of persons to be | so honored. Mrs. Girvan is to be congratulated. As an interested and dedicated PTA worker, she will be pleased to know that all money derived from these memberships is placed in the Hannah Kent Schoff Memorial Scholarship Fund, avail- able for worthy boys and girls in Pennsylvania who choose to enter training for the teaching profession.” Honorary State Life Members look forward: to the annual State PTA convention. Following the ceremony, Mrs. Fred Eck, on behalf of Mrs. Girvan, pre- sented to John Rosser, Junior High School’ Principal, a plaque designed and made by Mrs. Girvan, commem- orating the date of organization in 1930. Mrs. Girvan is the mother of eleven children, one of whom, Robert, lost his life in Italy, when, with six other volunteer comrades he was instantly killed while advanc- ing to ‘an exposed position. A daughter, Mary Louise, died in in- fancy. Another daughter, Kathryn, died nine months before Robert was killed. . The boys are in the floor-covering field, following in the footsteps of Mrs. Girvan’s father, William Britt of Wilkes-Barre, and those of their own father, who at sixteen became an employee of Mr. Britt. The oldest, John, carries out his profession in Portland, Oregon. Next in line, Francis, also of Dal- las, is in Kingston, .in floor cover- ings and kitchen installations. Mrs. Ben Ryan of Ramsey, N. J., and Mrs. Donald McVey, West New York, N. Y., break with tradition. Robert, the boy who met tragedy in Italy, laid all the tile in the government barracks in Puerto Rico before enlisting in the Army. Mrs. Albert Lewis lives in Phoenix, Arizona. Joseph Girvan, Norristown, has a floor covering and kitchen installa- tion business. William Girvan, Mahwah, N. J., specializes: in floor coverings for Herbert Bright of New. York City, a firm which’ handles important assignments for movie stars and big businesses. Thomas is a floor covering con- tractor in Eugene, Oregon, not too far from Portland where the eldest son is in business. Mrs. Girvan has sixteen grand- children’ and three greatgrandchil- dren. With all the children grown up and away from home Mrs. Girvan has more leisure now to devote to painting and the making of cera- mics. For a time, Mrs. Girvan taught successive classes in ceramics. She turns out small pieces of inter- esting woodwork, ! also, a sample occupying a position of prominence on the mantelpiece at the Dallas Post. ; The family moved to Dallas in the early 1920s, after having ‘lived in Forty Fort and Berwick. Only the two youngest children, Thomas and Mary Louise were born in Dallas. Plan Testimonial Dinner | Jonathan Davis Fire Company is planning a testimonial dinner for part will be Jpdge Benjamin R. Judge J. Harold Flannery, | Thoma Lewis and former Governor John Fine. THURSDAY, APRIL 6, i Many Are Fined For Not Having Dogs Licensed State Officers Will Visit Dallas Township During Coming Week Jackson Township, State Dog Law they made numerous : owners of dogs running without licenses. 1 the Peace George Prater where they buying a 1961 license for a male dog at a cost of $1.25 or for a female at $2.25. ag A number of owners whose dogs were licensed but found running at large were warned that they will have to keep their dogs on leash or officer returns for a check-up. Chief of Police Herbert Updyke said: State Enforcement Officers were asked to come into Kingston Township after three persons were bitten by dogs in January and two in March. He also said that dogs broke into a youngster’s rabbit pen rabbits—the youngster’s profit for a year. Chief of Police Irwin Coolbaugh said he expects the Enforcement Officers to be working in Dallas Township next week and warned licenses immediately, Later this; month, according to both Updyke and Coolbaugh, the State Enforcement Officers will con- duct a county wide drive against unlicensed dogs. Dog Law Enforcement Officers from throughout the state will congre- gate here with mobile equipment to conduct an intensive campaign. Candidate For Office DANIEL RICHARDS Making a bid for the Republican nomination for tax collector in Dal- las Township is Daniel Richards of Goss Manor, ‘A resident of the Back Mountain Region for thirty-eight years, twén- ty-five of them in Dallas Township, Mr. Richards is widely known i throughout the area where he has been active in Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company for thirty years. For ten years after his graduation Richards was manager for the American Stores, later embarking in the grocery business for himself {until he was forced to retire because of ill health. For the past ten years he has been an auditor for the State of Pennsyl- vania working out of the Auditor General's office. Active in all phases of community life, Mr. Richards has been a mem- ber of Dallas Community Ambulance Association ever since its founding and is still a member of the Asso- | ciation’s Board of Directors. For the past five years he has been chair- man of the auditing committee. He has also served as president of Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company and has been assistant chief for the past company finances for the past fifteen. years. He served nine years as a mem- ber of Dallas Township School Board, - serving as president for one term and as secretary for three years. Dan is married to the former Jeanne Keithline of Shavertown. They have two children both grad- uates of Dallas Schools. Daniel, Jr., is now an Airman 2/c and has been a member of the U. S. Air Force for almost four years. Judith Anne is a student nurse at Wyoming Valley Hospital in Wilkes-Barre. Dan feels that a tax collector should have his office in a con- venient location. His home at 52 Saginaw Avenue in Old Goss Manor is convenient to all residents of the Township. : Dan is a member of Dallas Metho- Lodge and all Masonic bodies. : His hobbies are Sect and bowling. After doing a thorough job in All were taken before Justice of , on Staub Road and killed eight all owners to get their 1961 dog - nine years and an auditor of the dist Church and of George M. Dallas z Enforcement Officers worked last week in Kingston Township where arrests of were fined $10 plus $9 costs, a 3 charge they could have avoided by face a fine when the enforcement A § At that time all from Back Mountain Schools, Mr. pa
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