The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, April 13, 1961, Image 2

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    SECTION A— PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889) —
“More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
Now In Its Tlst Year”
ONLY
m= YESTERDAY
" Member Audit Bureau of Circulations 5 VS
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association © =z
Member National Editorial Association TATE Ten and Twenty Years Age
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local
hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it.
‘We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self - addressed,
stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this: material be
held for more than 30 days.
National display advertising rates 84c per column inch.
Transient rates 80c.
Political advertising $1.10 per inch.
+ Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline
Monday 5 P.M.
! Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged
at 85¢ per column inch.
* Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00.
Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance
that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair
for raising money will appear in a specific issue.
Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which
has not previously appeared in publication.
Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY
Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN
Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS
Sports—JAMES LOHMAN
Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS
Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK
Circulation—DORIS MALLIN
A non.partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
In The Dallas Post
IT HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO:
General Pershing’s own story
started in the Dallas Post, giving
reminiscences of World War I. |
Speaking of the Expeditionary Force
1
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1961
LILI arr 1
7
| crease in school taxes. While he did
not seem to know of any source of
about thirty mills additional taxes, |
over and above the previous heavy
increases, is in prospect.
Our reply, “Not much.”
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters
One of our newer residents comes | tax already levied will be:the same,
[around to inquire what can be done |
to ward off a rumored heavy in- |
|
such ‘information, he had heard that | | Yatesville Borough 104.1,
| make a cent The taxes levied of
101.1 mills. make ten cents plus. This
It requires no special knowledge | means a tax of over .ten per cent
AHN
but the borough has a new
capita tax of $3.
Highest in total millage in the
county were Slocum Township 107.1,
Dallas
| Borough 101.1. These figures mean
more in dollars and cents. Ten mills
per
in France, he said, “No commander
was ever privileged to lead a finer
force.”
Peynton Teo cut fingers severely
when he fell with a five-gallon
bottle.
An anonymous visitor to the Dal-
las Post recollected that in 1900 he
staked Henry Ford to a meal in
Philadelphia, “and Hengy was glad
to get it.” He went on to say that |
Mr. Ford, now many times a million-
aire, had just” enough money for
transportation back to Detroit.
Kingston Township School District
appealed from an award of $5,882
to Mrs. Ziba Howell, in the death
of her husband while going to Har-
risburg on school business. Mr. Ho- |
well, supervisor of schools, was |
fatally injured in a traffic accident.
Abe Morris, Shavertown’s newest
barber, said business was so good
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
Editorially Speaking:
he was thinking of hiring an assis-
tant.
Walter Hoover of Pittston moved
to Dallas, planning to open a music
/studio
Let's Use Imagination
On names for new developments and new estates,
we are getting into a rut in the Back Mountain.
This is a beautiful country. Suitable names for de-
velopments and clusters of homes might well be built upon.
the natural aspects of some of ‘the loveliest land in the
United States. The scenery is easy to live with . . . not too
large, not too overpowering, not breathtaking as snow-
capped Rocky Mountain peaks or rugged Maine coastline.
A home-like country, pink with laurel in June, blaz-
ing with color in October . . . a land dotted with white
farmhouses, sleek cattle grazing on the hills, forests rising
gently to the sky, clear brooks and placid ponds.
Some of the names reflect the charm of the Back
Mountain.
Birch Lane . . . Oak Hill . . .
Just for fun, here is a list of names that typify the
area, names which would enrich the character of the com-
munity, names which sing.
And all for free . . . plenty more where those came
from!
Robin-Wood. High Orchard. Folded Hills. Pleasant
Pastures. Singing Pines. Clear Brook. Land and Sky.
Rocky Ledge. Crocus Lane. Laurel Walk. Blooming Valley.
Sunny Point.
* There are so many delightful combinations, beginning
with natural resources.
How can you go wrong? Hills, lakes ledges, brooks,
valleys, green forests, blue sky, spotted fawns, grey
boulders, chuckling streams, clean winds . . . Completely tify the grounds of the new high
limitless. school with shrubbery under direc-
EDM | tion of Jim Hutchison, Luzerne
Barnyard Notes
Back from the South along with the robins and blue birds are
. and Mrs. Adolph Eddinger who returned from Lake Worth over
weekend.
i Our congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. William Davis of Dallas, and
Mr, and Mrs. Claude Cooke of Fernbrook who have just observed
their fiftieth wedding anniversaries and to Mr; and Mrs. Ray Shiber
Lo will observe their fifty-fifth next Tuesday.
There are many interesting stories they can relate.
Only yesterday Ray, who is my constant Civil War companion,
recalled how Mrs. Shiber’s father, the late Jake Gillman who was born
in a log cabin at East Dallas, owned a canal boat which he operated
between Wilkes-Barre and Chesapeake Bay.
When the old gentleman was 88 years old, Ray recalls, he asked
Ray if he would take him to Danville to see the old locks. Ray re-
members that they made the trip to Berwick by train and then took
tthe trolley to Bloomsburg and on to Danville. Tears came in the old
man’s eyes as he saw the locks and recalled the incidents of a day
‘in 1959 during Buchanan's Panic when he arrived at the locks with
two other canalboat men on their way upstream to Nanticoke. The
lockkeeper refused to fill the lock with water because among the
three they could not raise $2.50 in silver to pay the fee. Mr. Gillman
recalled that he had $123. in paper money 'in his purse at the time.
but that it was worthless because of the panic. The three men left
their ‘boats, put their mules to pasture and walked the 61 miles
up river to home. It was six months before the paper money regained
its value and they could return for their boats.
Now that the New York Times, Philadelphia Inquirer, Ford Times
and many other periodicals have joined with the Dallas Post in
recognizing the Civil War I am again in good graces with my mother-
in-law, who had remarked to Myra a few days before she saw last
Sunday’s newspapers, “I think Howard is a little queer.”
The Inquirer's two-page color map and its special magazine
section devoted to the 100th Anniversary raised my stock and her
eyebrows.
If you haven't received tthe March and April issues of Ford Times
or last Sunday Inquirer, by all means get them. Youll be glad you
did. .
Up until last Monday when I gave two talks on the Civil War
at Dallas Junior High School and before Wyoming Valley Torch
Club, Myra thought she was one of the few women of her generation
to have lost her husband in the Civil War. [
But after the speeches she learned that there are many other
Civil War Widows who can sympathize with her. Not the least of
the casualties is Dr. Charles E. Myers of Kingston who leaves his wife
fuming in the hot Virginia sunshine while he explores old battle-
fields and cemetaries. Dr. Myers’ specialty, naturally, is Civil War
medicine and surgery.
Nothing nicer could have happened yesterday than a telephone
call from Atty. William Brewster of Kingston, dean of Wyoming
Valley historians and author of the History of The Certified Town-
ship of Kingston and a number of other local historical works. Atty.
Brewster, now well along in his eighties, hard of hearing, and
partially incapacitated by a stroke, is still a giant of a man.
His contributions toward the preservation of local history, his
athletic thinking on the destruction of personal freedom by over-
powering government and his sage observations on life make him a
man at whose feet we are proud to sit.
Atty. Brewster called, only because he is unable to write, “You
knew them?” he asked, “those old veterans. I knew them, too,
_ many of them. You gave a fine talk.”
those who paw Jia,
&
The bigger men are, I find, the more generous they are with
Wild ducks were plentiful, settling
in ‘huge flocks on Huntsville Reser-
voir,
Trucksville purchased a fire-
truck chassis, on which equipment
would be installed later. Down pay-
ment was $200, with $420 remaining
to be raised.
Accidentally in possession of a
car- exactly like his own, Harry
Scoutowicz of Harveys Lake hot-
'| footed it back to Pittston to ex-
change. Both cars had been parked
in front of a garage.
You could buy soap for five cents
a cake; potatoes 35 cents a peck;
eight candy bars for a quarter, big
ones; and cQcoa, a two pound can
to see at a glance that there will be | per dollar assessed. .
a heavy increase. All prior facilities | If the school authorities are
are being continued,
duction in maintenance or'operation. | age ‘is probably pretty well worked
Therefore all the expense of getting :
pupils to the new ‘school,
service,
power, telephones, unkeep, etc. will
be added to the outlay heretofore
experienced. There may be and
probably will be, added expenses
| due to the reorganization of the
system. Additional teachers may be
required, although this may be post-
poned for a year or two to spread
out the shock, as it were.
Since the State Auditors
decreed that accounts,
ments,
budget items,
more attention will be paid to ac-
counting hereafter
Mellman would have got around
_to getting this done, which is really
not his responsibility, but that of
the secretary. This is nothing new.
It was the law as far back as 1927
when this writer became a school
director,
years,
The school laws contain limitations
in millage, but they do not mean
a thing. Every one contains a loop-
hole. According to a compilation in |
the RECORD ALMANAC millages |
run from 26 in Wilkes-Barre City to
68 in ‘Slocum Township.
School millage must be uniform in
all the parts of the new district,
but
separately as before.
listing in the Record Almanac shows |
that
were assessed by all taxing author- | to intrude where he is not wanted,
ities a total of 101_1 mills, plus $10. !
per capita school tax. The borough | portunity to examine it_
with no re-| abreast of their work, the new mill-
Foes as of now. The County Asses-
sors are required to furnish the
assessment figures by April 1.
Teachers are ‘entitled to certain auto-
matic increases, and other expenses
such as books and supplies can be
estimated reasonably close. Action
has been taken to cut the tax col-
lector’s commissions, but this will be
only a small drop in the big bucket.
The reorganization has been run-
janitor
light and |
heat, water,
now it is probably pretty = well
understood
According to law, the board must
prepare a ‘proposed budget” at least
thirty days before the final adop-
tion of the budget. The budget must
include prospective receipts as well
as expenses, which means that tax
levies must be estimated at the
time the proposed budget is pre-
pared. The “proposed Budget’ must
be made available to the public for
twenty days.
When the budget law was first
passed, the school board adopted
the plan of posting the budget in
public places. On the very first
posting, the school directors and
some of their agents and employers
were taken into court, petitioners
demanding a budget reduction. The
posting practice was continued dur-
ing the term of the same secretary,
but immediately thereafter it was
discontinued. Legally, the budget is
open to mspection in a specified
residents of Dallas Borough | district office. In fact, no one wants
have
disburse-
etc. shall show the proper
it is probable that |
Probably Dr.
and had been then for
other will be levied
That same
taxes
and no one has any adequate op-
for 19 cents.
IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO:
Returning from a trip to war-time |
Europe, Dr. H A. Spencer, in a talk
to C. A. Frantz and Mrs. Harold
Titman after disembarking in New
York, said that the Germans were
thin and pale, due to vitamin defici-
ency.
Back Mountain's belowed ‘Doc’
Schooley was the subject of a “Know
Your Neighbor” column.
“Construction of the new Dallas-
Harveys Lake Highway seemed’ as-
sured, with bids to be let right away
and construction started in June
Lehman citizens planned to beau-
County farm agent.
A stroke was fatal to John D.
Williams of Fernbrook.
The road near the Still apartment
in Shavertown was in very bad
shape, with cars bogging down in the
mud.
George Greggson, Shrine View,
honored oldsters. of the Hazard
Wire Rope Co among them Hugh
Murray of Pioneer Avenue, sixth
oldest in point of service.
Buck shad was 15 cents a pound;
turkeys 27; prime rib roast 25.
Violet Sink was wed to Samuel
W. Keast.
AND 10 YEARS AGO:
Harry Sweezy, Fernbrook, drop-
ped dead while trying to excavate
his car from a road bog on Dutch
Mountain, in a locality where few
travellers ever passed. Mrs. Sweezy,
with nightfall upon her, made a
futile attempt to get help, but found
only boarded-up hunting cabins
Twenty hours later, after spending
the night in the car with her’ hus-
band, she found help after seeking
for aid almost all day. As night ap-
proached for the second day, she
found a mailbox with Bernard
O’Leary’s name on it, and ‘a path
leading to his house.
The Sweezey’s lived with “Aunt
Frank” Still, 92 and blind, who was
never left alone. When they did not
return on schedule, the alarm was
given, and search parties alerted.
Kingston Township chief Francis Mc-
Carty was Mr. Sweezey’s brother-
in-law.
The fourth Annual Back Moun-
tain Concert featured local talent
in group singing, piano and violin
solos, and dance offerings Samuel
Davis was one of the stars.
Treva Traver, Eleanor Butler, and
Fay Smith were candidates for May
Queen at Lake.
Hislop’s new cocktail lounge drew
a big crowd on opening day.
“Uncle” Boyd Atherholt, 72, enor-
mously popular with the children
he helped across the street in
Trucksville, dropped dead while
working in this garden.
Edward Blake, new . superinten-
dent of Craftsmen Engravers, pur-
chased the Bonham place in New
Goss Manor.
Announcement was made of the
marriage of Shirley Winter, Sha-
vertown, to Carlton Kohl of Kings-
ton.
Phil Cheney opened the Dallas
Service ‘Station in his own name,
purchasing the interest of James
Besecker
Classified Ads
Get Ei Results
‘guns booming as their tattered flag was lowered.
bor.
of the Shicts. of he {
100 Years Ago This Week...in
THE CIVIL WAR
(Events exactly 100 years ago this week in the Civil War—
told in the language and style of today.)
Confederate soldiers inside Ft. Suniter
Ft. Sumter Falls
Anderson's Force Surrenders
After 33-Hour Hammering
CHARLESTON, S.C.—April 14—Ft. Sumter fell today. .
The handful of men commanded by Maj. Robert Anderson left their
island fortress proudly, a Yankee Doodle roll on their drums and 50
They had endured a relentless
83-hour bombardment. Some 3,000 Doubleday
ing the final hours,
rounds of Confederate shot and |said. 3
shell had reduced Sumter to
smoking rubble. GEN. BEAUREGARD demande
ed Sumter’s surrender only three
‘days. ago in a note carried by
boat to Anderson, who had been
Beauregard’s artillery instructor
at West Point.
Anderson told Beauregard’s
envoys -he would surrender at
neon tomorrow—unless he re-
ceived supplies,
With the Union ships approach-
ing, the Confederate officers told
Anderson they would open fire
within the hour. And they did.
- The first shot, from the Morris
Island emplacements, was dead
on target.
With them, the defenders carried
the effects of the only soldier on
either side killed in the intense
exchange of fire.
Pvt. Daniel Hough died when
one of his own guns exploded.
Five gunmates were wounded in
the blast.
The Sumter soldiers—65 men
and a brass band of seven, form-
ing two skeleton
companies of
the First Artil-
lery regiment—
were taken by
launch to the
U.S. transport Sumter soldiers watched its.
Baltic anchored burning fuse as it screamed
beyond the sand- through the pre-dawn sky to land -
bars guarding
in the center of the parade
Charleston har-
grounds.
* * * ~
THE FIRST Southern gun re-
portedly was fired by a 67-year-old
civilian, Edmund Ruffin of Wir
ginia, a farmer and rabid pro
slavery editor.
Anderson, a ZXentuckian who
married a Georgia girl—he once
owned slaves there, but sold them
as the abolition question grew hot-
ter—took command at Charleston
last Nov. 21, relieving aged Col,
John L. Gardner,
His father commanded the
same harbor defenses during
the Revolutionary War.
Anderson’s men are fiercely
loyal to him. Only one—ILt. R.K.
Meade of Virginia—stayed behind
to join the Confederate forces.
Aides said Anderson carried
with him a memento of the Sum-
ter bombardment. It was the flag
he had so gallantly defended.
Union Call
WASHINGTON, D.C.—April 15—
The government today issued a
call for 75,000 volunteers for army
and navy service.
The Baltic ANDERSON
sailed. at once for New York.
Surrender of Sumter was or-
dered by Anderson yesterday as
a relief naval expedition from
New York wallowed helplessly at
sea beyond the range of busy
Southern guns.
Food supplies were gone.
The soldiers had existed on
fat, rotting pork for days.
Ammunition was nearly ex-
pended.
The fort was a smoke-filled
mass of wreckage. The few DOW-
der kegs left were wrapped in
dampened blankets.
*
CONFEDERATE gunners under:
Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard had
lobbed almost 100 rounds an hour
—day and night—at Sumter, which
sits three miles out in the bay.
But Anderson’s guns answered
throughout the attack, even while
his men were choking on the
smoke of the burning fort.
Several times Sumter’s flag
was shot down, Each thie, it
was raised.
Capt. Abner Doubleday, execu-
tive officer at Sumter, said a
shortage of cartridge bags ham-
pered operations of the guns.
New bags were being made out
COPYRIGHT 101. HEGEWISCH
Mb ih i
CHICAGO 83
BRADY SoLLECTION Pres:
. aaNaL ARC
ning along such a long period that by |"
| Company made plans at a recent
Rotary at dinner on April 20. Com-
| Glenn Jchnson,
OBITUARY
Mrs. Josephine Felter
Victim Of Sudden Stroke
Mrs.
{| Beaumont and former resident of
Noxen, died Sunday morning in Sus-
quehanna. Funeral services are
scheduled today at 2'p. m. from the
home of her sister, Mrs. Ralph Lutes,
of Lutes Corners. Officiating will be
Rev. Ruth Underwood, former pas-
ter of Alderson Methodist Charge.
Burial will be in Beaumont Ceme-
tery. Nephews will be pallbearers.
Mrs. Felter, only 54, suffered a
cerebral hemorrhage at her home in
| Susquehanna, and lived for only a
few minutes after being admitted
to Susquehanna General Hospital.
The former Josephine Marilla
Richards - was born in Beaumont,
daughter of Mrs. Anna Richards of
Noxen and the late Kiler Richards.
A graduate of Beaumont High
School, she later took beauty culture
at the Bradford Beauty School in
Wilkes-Barre. She owned and oper-
ated a beauty salon in Windsor, N. Y.
Besides her mother she is survived
by her husband, William: daughter,
Mrs. Harry Zachrias, Harveys Lake;
sisters, Mrs. Ralph Lutes, Noxen;
Mrs. Palmer Updyke, Kunkle; broth-
ers, John, Green, N. Y., William,
Bestal, N. Y., and seven grandehi-
dren.
Arrangements by Nulton.
Mrs. Tressa Race, 70,
Dies After Long Illness
Mrs. Tressa Race, 70, died Wed-
nesday night at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Harold Rought of
Center Moreland, following a long
illness.
She was buried Sunday afternoon
in Fitch Cemetery, Lockville. The.
body lay in state at Center More-
land Baptist fdhurch. Conducting
services were Rev. Truman Reeves
and Rev. Lyle Peterson.
Miller Stocker,
belonged to
there.
Y.; her daughter, Mrs. Harold
Rough, Center Moreland; six grand-
children and one great-grandchild;
two sisters: Mrs. Edna Loomis, Cen-
termoreland, and Mrs. Edward Rich-
ards, Baltimore, Md.; a brother,
Charles, West Pittston.
Arrangements by Nulton.
Clyde Stevens Suffers
Coronary Thrombosis
str: icken with a coronary thrombosis.
He had not been in robust health for
several years.
He was buried at Hanover Green
Tuesday afternoon, Dr. Alfred L.
ist Church, conducting services from
the Luther Kniffen Funeral Home.
Josephine Felter, native of |
From
Pillar To Post
by HIX
When the pizza, piping hot and dripping with melted cheese
. and tomato sauce, was handed round on huge cookie sheets at the
YWCA luncheon last Thursday, the sight was a welcome one.
But also it posed a pretty problem.
The last time I tangled with a large slab of pizza, it was in the
composing room at the Dallas Post, where everybody was gathered
for a quick snack in between reading of page proofs.
Tangled is the correct term. The pizza was hot and Savory. It
had been a long time since lunch.
I took a large bite, and immediately become completely im-
mobilized, the same way a dog is immobilized when some youth
hands it a ball of maple sugar wax.
(You don’t know. what maple sugar wax is?
the world coming to?)
Mumbling, and with a hand over my rabulh, I made for the
powder room.
This was before the horrrid day when Howard came up out of the
basement wearing a peculiar expression, and bearing a peculiar bit
of news. Seems he'd seen a rat swimming around, a rat which in-
spected him with beady eyes before diving beneath the surface and
vanishing.
In the powder room I disentangled myself and returned to the
composing room, completely composed, and xondy to approach the
remaining pizza with more discretion.
‘And the moral of that is, when you are Wreaking ina new set:
of uppers and lowers, don’t try to bite anything. Just cut it up into
very small pieces and hope for the best.
Everybody else at the table at the YWCA attacked the pizza
boldly, biting it off with relish.
But not ‘Hix. Hix took it aboard in dainty bites, ignoring the -
furtive glances of table-mates who concluded that Hix was putting
on airs. _ J
The pizza disappeared sliver by sliver.
“Now, if you're about ready,” whispered the hostess,
get ahead with the speech.”
That speech . . .
It was a last minute arrangement Somebody scraped the bottom
of the program barrel, and there was Hix, floundering around and
snapping at the bait.
“Talk for about twenty minutes,” advised the chairman.
So Hix talked for about twenty minutes, noting with concern
that a number of Back Mountain residents were present, and praning
her remarks to fit the situation.
As a lecture on the art of writing, it was a complete washout,
but it did touch upon a number of widely related subjects, most of
them frothy. \
“we can
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Dear me. What is hh
A native of Plymouth, daughter |
of ‘the late Adam P. and ‘Catherine |
she spent most of |
her life in Center Moreland, and |
the Baptist Church |
She is survived by her husband,
William; a son, Clark, Endicott, N. |
Clyde S. Stevens, 54, died at his |
home in Loyalville Saturday after- |
Wash and Dry While You Shop
LAUNDERGENTER
Shavertown Shopping Center
OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY
WATER SOFTENER to Save You Soap!
~ Phileo-Bendix Washers and Dryers
noon., passing away suddenly when |
Crayton, pastor of Kingston Method- |
Mr. Stevens, Wilkes-Barre native
| and former plumbing contractor of
Courdale, moved ito this area: three |
years ago. He belonged to First |
was a member of Conyngham Post,
Camp 169, Sons of Union Veterans !
of the (Civil War, and a trustee of |
GAR Memorial Hall, |
His parents were the late Robert
and Elizabeth Shiffer Stevens.
was a graduate of Coughlin High
School. :
He leaves his widow, the former
Flore
‘| Wilmington, Del.; Mrs. Walter Wes- ||
ley, TLoyalville; James, Greenwood,
Indiana; Clyde, Shoemakersville;
Mrs. Earl King, Shavertown; Mrs.
Glenmore Richards, Kingston; four-
teen grandchildren.
Pallbearers
Elmer Scovell, Hewell Henderson,
Steve Lec, James Coulter, and Ron-
ald Scovell.
Lehman Auxiliary
To Serve Rotary Anns
Ladies Auxiliary of Lehman Fire
meeting to serve Women of Dallas
Mesdames Ethel Jonhson,
Russell Ide, Joe
Stolarick, Ellen Lamoreau, Charles
Ely. Others attending the meeting;
Mesdames Anna Beisel, H. A. Brown,
Clara Mekeel, Joe Ellsworth, Dor-
rance Mekeel, Margaret Sponseller,
Myron Baker, Garwin Tough, Russell
Coolbaugh.
mittee:
Safety Valve
ORCHID FOR THE BOYS
Dear Sir:
The orchid mentioned on page 2
of last week’s Post goes to; troop No.
155 Boy Scouts of America at Trucks-
ville. The Troop is in charge of Mr.
Lee Philo. The name signs are now
being redone, and when the weather
breaks the station will be painted.
This is one of the Service Projects
of Troop 155.
Very Truly Yours
Donald H. Smith
The City of "Chester, Delaware
St IBRARY 5 Con ORES
Methodist Church, Wilkes-Barre, and -
He |.
e Hess; six children: Robert, |
were Charles Higgs, |
Secretary Troop Committee |
192 Hill Street, Trucksville |
County, the second oldest settlement ||
in Pennsylvania, was: founded by the ‘
Swedes who gave it the name of
7 Upland.
Leonard’s
Open‘Every Brings
Nite in the ¥
Gateway You An
Shopping i
Co Unusual
Value in a Full
TRANSISTOR 'RADIO
{84 Hurry in. J
SET INCLUDES GENUINE LEATHER CASE,
9 VOLT BATTERY AND EAR PHONES
SN gi Vals Lng Jos
4 Tr 8. sw ST,
- WILKES-BARRE
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