The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 02, 1961, Image 8

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    Ee ann — POPPA RRR ld
DALLAS POST CLASSIFIED ADS GET QUICK RESULTS
~ — Phone ORchard 4-5656 or 4-7676 —
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,
1961
RATES — Minimum If charged - $1.00 - 20 words.
Cash with order - Minimum 85¢ for 20 words.
5c per word over 20 words - Display Classified $2. per inch
AHL
Vrrzd 1
Buy — Sell — Swap — Or Trade In The Trading Post
Lg)
1]
al]
Tn
i
t= Mitotic Trt
and heater, four way seat, elec-
c windows, turnpike cruiser en-
gine. Excellent condition, low mile-
| age, original owner, $1195. ORchard
y 4-398 after 6 p.m.
Porch Storm Windows, wood
Grane. 12 light, 32x62 inches. $12
. the lot. Phone OR 4-8646.
wn RINGER-TYPE Washer $15; single
_day-bed, two double day-beds.
eaf 7-3621.
ERN Carpet Loom. small tab-
es, chairs, etc. Phone ORchard
Cows for sale. Phone NEptune
-2063.
| Boom OIL space heater;
1958 Plymouth Belvidere 4 door
| hard top. One owner. Standard
shift shift. R. Tyson, Pole 189, Harveys
ke, Pa.
£5 PAY MORE when you can get
the best professional work at Ed's
auty Shop in Trucksville, Mon-
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs-
i r till 5 p.m. permanent waves
hi. 50 up; shampoos and sets $1.50.
ar prices after 5 p.m. and
A Fridays and Saturdays. Open every
| evening until New Year's. New tele-
phone number after Sunday: 696-
2375.
' OUR HOUSE Can't Go With Us ta
L Indiana so we can’t have four bed-
rooms, den, 1% baths, large living
room with fire place, garage. But
you can. Call OR 5-1834.
TY- TWO LOTS on Harveys Lake
Highway between Dallas and Ide-
town. Phone ORchard 4- 0861.
HAR
~ RUBBER FOOT WEAR for the en-
tire family at Joe’s Men's Shop.
35 Main Street, Dallas.
| KELLER'S GARDENS, Idetown.
‘Phone NE 9-5426 Bulbs:
Music |
Narcissus, Poeticus, Poetaz, Tulips -
‘giant tall Darwin and Parrot; hybrid
lilies; cushion chrysanthemums.
DROP McINTOSH, $1.25 bushel;
~. hand picked, Spies, McIntosh,
Grecaings, Rome Beauties, Cort- |
, Pippins. OR 4-0564 or OR
4-0276.
PADA TV—I17 inch Table Model and i
Stand. OR 5-1589.
‘Four GOODYEAR Truck Type Tires,
. Size 700x15 also 2 Crepe Dresses
Size 40. Call OR 4-2312 before |
9:30 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
I adic
8.25
OR 4-8531.
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY against
intruders. Use our “No Hunting”;
“No Trespassing” and “Safety Zone”
signs. Printed on high quality, long-
lasting, cardboard or cloth. Single
colors on cardboard Sc each; red
and black 6¢ each; cloth 10c each.
Lower prices in quantities. The Dal-
las Post.
FOAM RUBBER— any size—thick-
ness for mattresses—cushions—
seats. Upholstering material—&1.00
to $2.50 yard. MATTRESSES MADE
& EXPERTLY RECONDITIONED &
RECOVERED—M. B. BEDDING CO.
factory, 526 So. Main St., Wilkes-
Barre.
DEEP-MINED ANTHRACITE stove
and nut coal $16.00; pea coal
$14.00. All sizes. Single ton, 50c
extra. Telepnone OR 4-3081.
Lowest Prices
on SCRATCH PADS
5 pads (11 oz.)
29¢ pkg.
THE DALLAS POST
INTERNATIONAL CUB Cadet garden
tractors, tillers, McCulloch chain
saws and racing motors; go-carts.
A. F. Walters, Memorial Highway,
; Dallas, ORchard 4-3227.
RUGS. Any SIZE —~ All known
makes. A little out of the way
but a lot less to pay. B. Carpet
Company, 267 South Main Street,
Wilkes-Barre.
WINCHESTER '410 repeating shot
-gun (pump) 8 years old $50;
Ithaca .20 gauge, double bbl. 28-in.
$45; L. C. Smith .16 gauge double
bbl. 28-in. $50; L. C. Smith .16
gauge special grade, featherweight
26-in. double bbl. $75; Winchester
,12 gauge pump gun with hammer,
full choke $40. These guns are per-
fect, in beautiful condition from
the collection of my late husband.
They may be seen at The Dallas
Post. Mrs. C. A. Boston.
FRESH Dug Potatoes; apples' and
pumpkins at the Arthur Newman
Holland, King Alfred datfodils, |
! References
farm, corner of mew Dallas High
~. !School road. ORchard. 4-3408.
Female Help Wanted—
DUMP Body and, Hoist; four tires |,
x 20; 1940 Ford Sedan, as is. |}
monthly, ORchard 4-7107.
THOMAS P. GARRITY
Realtor
REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE
Service to the Greater Back Mt. Ares
Pole 89 — Harveys Lake.
HARVEYS LAKE NE 09-5105
For Rent—
THREE BEDROOM house. Hunts-
ville Dam. Automatic oil heat.
Immediate occupancy. Phone Butler
T7-3478.
SECOND FLOOR Apartment,
rooms, heat, hot water, electric |
stove, tile bath and shower, pri- |
$65 |
vate
entrance. In Dallas.
NICE ROOM in private home, close
to everything. 54 Carverton Road,
Trucksville. ORchard 4-2743. After
Sunday, dial 696-1610
landscaped lot,
garage.
year
Lake. Newly decorated. $40 month.
Phone NE 9- 3196
NEW 3-bedroom Apartment
Sweet Valley. Oil heat. $55. per
month. Betty Kanarr, VA 3-8878.
Room And Board—
ROOMS—Reasonable rates for aged,
HARVEYS LAKE Pole 282, modern
lake shore year round house,
oil heat, two-car
NEptune 9-3606.
IDEAL For Couple, Three room and
bath furnished
round
apartment and
cottage at Harveys
CENTRAL Dallas, 4- Bedrodh Home,
modern kitchen and bath. 2-car
garage. Qil heat. $90 per month.
Betty Kanaar, VA 3-8878.
at
pleasant surroundings, good food
and care. ORchard 4-0862.
Wanted To Buy—
4-4008.
1,000 JUNK CARS, trucks or trac-
tors, regardless of condition. Top
dollar; Sweet Valley, GR 7-3641.
WANTED TO BUY, six wooden
framed storm windows, 28 x59
inch size. Rev. Lawry,
Sanitary Service—
three | |
ORchard
VACUUM CLEANERS
Repaired © Serviced ® Sold
- All Models and Makes
Prompt Service
CALL
JOSEPH S. BLAUM
NE 9-9631
|
BACK MOUNTAIN
RADIATOR SHOP
Trucksville, Pa.
| (Bob & Don’s City Service),
Latest Barbee Equipment
_ Phone OR 5-1405
TRANSUE’S T.V. and Radio Service
now located off Rt. 309 on Platts-
burg R. Beaumont. Call OR 4-5696
for 24 hr. service.
FUEL OILS, Atlantic Products. Me-
ter Service to insure you accu-
436
acy. Montross 0Qil Company,
Main Street, Luzerne. Phone BUt-
ler 7-2361.
MARGUERITE'S BEAUTY SHOP,
for that trim cut, shampoo, and
wave, or a fresh new permanent.
Phone OR 4-3191.
CHAIR CANING and SPLINTING,
finest imported materials. OR
4-2714.
EXPERT UPHOLSTERING. Free esti-
mates. Stook Upholstery, Hill-
side Ave. Harveys Lake. Phone
NE 9-9416..
{8 Giant Philco-Bendix
: Washers and Dryers
WASH - DRY - IRON
Soft Water
§ Open 24 Hrs.
LAUNDERCENTER
Shopping Center
| Bt Shavertown
RESPONSIBLE WOMAN to care for
infant and light housework—mod- |
| ern home, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday,
| Tuesday and Wednesday; 8 a.m.
ito 3 pm. Thursday and Friday.
required. ORchard 4-
i 391.1.
Real Estate For Sale
Eight Room house, one and one
half baths, game room, garage,
large lot. Well situated on hill, view,
convenient to bus, schools, churches.
f ORchard 5-1874. -
~~ pedia; kerosene stove.
TYPEWRITERS, excellent condition; :
brooder; storm windows; encylo- !
FOUR GRAVE LOT at Memorial
Shrine Cemetery, below market |
Section. (Call
gE Write Box | price. Crest Lawn
; 44. Boyd Mead, OR 4-0629 evenings.
rE IMPORTED Italian Angora Cape, | LOT--78 Ferguson Plot, Longdale
| $25. Like mew. Brown Alaskan
3 seal cape, $30. Phone OR 4-6586.
i "FOUR PAIRS of Green Drapes. Call
| OR 4-6137.
TWO White Evening Gowls, one
Aqua Silk Cocktail Dress, sige 12;
$15.95 copper enameling set with
[ s. Practically new. [Selling for
18.00, Call OR 4-5502.
; SHOP LUZERNE Wallpaper & Paint
Store for Linoleum, Wallpaper,
Paints and Miscelleneous. We give
IB. & H Green Stamps. 121 Main St.
Avenue, Shavertown; also approx-
imately one acre on Sweet Valley-
Hunlock Road, near new school.
Inquire D- D. Whitesell, 166 Oak
Street, Trucksville.
i BACK MOUNTAIN, Six-room Medal-
lion home, year and a half old;
three bedrooms, 1% baths, 2-car
garage, hot water heat, fully in-
sulated.’ School buses at door. Im-
mediate possession. $18,500. OR
5-1889
Post Classified Ads
For The Biggest Bargins
4 CONVENIENT OFFICES TO. SE
® Main Office— WILKES-BARRE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs,
9 A M to3 P. M.
Friday—9 A, M. to 5 P. M,
@ West Side Office—Edwardsville
Mon., Tues., Wed.,
9A M. to 3PM
Thurs, and Fri, 9 A.
Saturday 10 A. M, to
to
M., 8
2PM
In the Gateway Shopping Center
PM
@® Plymouth Office, Plymouth
Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs,
9 A.M to3 PM
Friday—9 A. M. to 5 P, M,
® Back Mt. Office—Shavertown
Mon,, Tues., Wed., Thurs,
8 A M to 2 P. M.
Friday, 8 A, M. to 2 P. M,
BP M to 8 PF M
Saturday 8 A. M. to 12 Noon
while
have, we do it.
4-2491.
TAILORING And ALTERNATIONS
ers.
4-7276,
SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privy
Jd. A. Singer, City
Senvengie 137 Dagobart Street,
Wilkes-Barre. Dial VA 3-4529.
| SEPTIC TANKS, reinforced concrete,
buy the best. Costs less in the
long run. C. E. German and Son,
Kingston 8-1448 or your local sup-
ply dealer.
Baby Sitting—
WILL CARE FOR small children
in my own home in Shavertiwn
mother works. ORchard
4-0449.
Work Wanted—
FALL CLEANING TIME. Yards, cel-
lars, garages. Any odd job you
Phone ©ORchard
on dresses, skirts, coats and trous-
Call Mrs. Bob Kappler, OR
Whom To Call—
BEAUTY SHOP now open for bad
ness. Shampoos, sets, permanents,
hair-cuts. Elizabeth Newman Keef-
er,, 5 Machell Avenue, Dallas. OR
4- 6659.
TOP SOIL: FILL. TOP SOIL
Regular and Screened
Complete Excavating Facilities
for
CELLARS, WATERLINES
' SEPTIC TANKS, GRADING
By contract or hour
Free Estimates.
Call
HOOVER and MILBRODT
OR 4-2494 OR 4-2498
PIANO TUNING and repairing. Muh-
lenburg 256-3613. Oscar White-
sell, Hunlock Creek, RFD 1.
FURNITURE REFINISHING; repair-
ing, antique work; removing
burns, scratches, polishing, in your
own home. All work guaranteed.
Free estimates. ORchard 4-1718.
BOTTLED GAS
PYROFAX
New and Used Appliances
Sales and Service
ROOD’S GAS AND APPLIANCE
: ‘COMPANY
Overbrook Avenue, Dallas
OR 4-5371
DON'T BE 'DISAPPOIY; TED! Bring
in your electric trajns now to be
repaired. Don’t wait ‘intil the holi-
day rush, ' Jenkins Hardware, small
appliance repair center, 1714 Wyo-
ming Avenue, Exeter, Phone Wyo-
ming 295. :
LAWN MOWERS RIPA
sharpened, new and used mowers
| and parts. Saw filing and retoothing,
knives and shears shérpened. Phone
Dallas OR 4-8404, William Eckert, |
in Hi lle,
.
PAINTING
INTERIOR — EXTERIOR
By Contract or Hour
|
| CHESTER ROBERTS
: Hunlock Creek R. D. 1
Phone Muhlenburg
2563692 or 2563690
BOTTLED GAS
Plumbing and Heating
Harold K. Ash
Shavertown Dallas OR 4-3161
DR. JAMES R. VAN LOON, chiro-
_practor will be at his office at
Pole 125, Harveys Lake during Oct-
ober and November, Saturdays 4 to
7 p.m. until further notice.
FURNACE CLEANING and Serv-
icing — Stokers, oil burners, Hand
fire, Hot Water - Steam - Huot air.
R- W. Weidner. Phone ORchard 4-
6108.
UNWANTED HAIR
Removed. Multiple Electrolysis
Painless, Scarless, Private
ADA EICHLER
203 West River Street
Wilkes-Barre
VA 3-7429
J
IS YOUR TRUCK, tractor or auto-
mobile using 0il? Your machanic
or garage will recommend SEALED
POWER guaranteed piston rings.
COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP
STULL BROTHERS, KINGSTON.
FRED PETERS, Authorized HGOVER
Dealer Sales-Service-Parts. Sales
payments arranged. All makes re-
paired. Free estimates. ORchard
4-5126, evenings NEptune 9-9830.
R. D. 4, Dallas, Pa.
LAST CALL FOR HELP. Wanted
24” German bisque doll with per-
fect hands for auction doll, Will
swap new dolls for German bisque
doll with some usable perfect parts.
Mrs. Arthur Newman. Phone OR
4-3408.
FLOOR SANDING and FINISHING.
All Types Floors. Work guar-
anteed. WEAVER and MADAR, OR
4-2565 and BU 8-6103.
Public Notice
NOTICE
Dallas District school directors
will meet Monday, November 13
instead of Tuesday, November 14,
in the Senior High School.
Harriet Stahl, secretary
The Dallas School District Board
for furnishing one (1) Telescope Lad-
of Education solicits sealed proposals
the School Board Office, Dallas
Senior High School Building, Dallas,
Pennsylvania.
All bids shall be in the hands of
Mrs, Harriet Stahl, Secretary, Dallas
' School Board Office, not later than
14:30 P.M., November 14, 1961. Bids
| will be opened publicly 2 the regu-
lar meeting of the Board, 8:00 P.M,,
November 14, 1961. Bid shall bo
plainly marked on the envelope “BID
ON LADDER.”
The Board reserves the right to ac-
cept or reject any or all bids.
“ESTATE OF EDITH M. ROWETT,
(Died October 18, 1961), late of
Luzerne Borough. Letters Testamen~
tary having been granted, all pers-
ons
requested “to make payment and
those having claims to present the
same to Walter T. Rowett and
Stella R. Miller, Executors, c/o
JONATHAN C. VALENTINE, ATTY.,
35 N. FRANKLIN Sis WILKES-
BARRE, PA.” 3
ESTATE OF LILLIAN W. HER-
LINGER (Died October 23, 1961)
late of Trucksville, Kingston Town-
ship. Letters Testamentary having
been granted, all persons indebted
to said estate are requested to make
payment and those having claims
to present the same to KENNETH |.
F. WILLIAMS, Executor, RD1 Box
660, Hunlocks (Creek, Pa.
I will be responsible only for
bills contracted personally by me.
pr Mrs. Hilda Newberry
91 Wellington Ave.
Dallas, Pa.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
Letters Testamentary have been
granted in the Estate of Sarah A.
Morgan, late of Kingston, (died
September 25, 1961). All persons
indebted to said estate are request-
ed to make payment and those
having claims or demands to pre-
sent same without delay to the
Executor, Ralph S. Morgan, 178
Summitt Street, Edwardsville,
Pennsylvania.
JOHN J. KOZLOSKI, Attorney
802 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg.
‘Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
Letters of Administration have been
granted in the Estate of Laura Mae
Taylor, late of Kingston, (died July
24, 1961). All persons indebted to
said estate are requested to pay and
those having claims or demands to
present the same without delay to
the Administrator, Harry 'W. Tay-
lor, Jr., 172 Woodlawn Ave., Moun:
tain Top, Pa.
John J. Kozloski, Ta ]
802 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
THE DRIVER'S
Prevention of being accidentally
thrown out of an automobile results
in a 25 per cent reduction in deaths.
This fact was presented following
a study of the value of seat belts.
Statistics have been reported to
demonstrate the reduction of major-
to-fatal injuries through the use of
seat belts,
Admittedly not a panacea for all
injuries and deaths in automobile
accidents, seat belt studies have
indicated their capacity to reduce
injuries graded as major-to-fatal, by
at least 35 per cent.
The risk of death or injury in an
automobile accident is to a large
extent dependent on the: frequency
of ejection.
In a recent study of injury-pro-
ducing accidents, 13% per cent of
the occupants had been ejected, and
the fatality rate was five times
greater in this group than among
occupants who were not ejected.
It is well-known that rear seat
occupants have far less risk of
ejection, and that the death rate is
about half that of front-seat occu-
pants. :
In a series of 54,000 automobile
accidents studied in one state, it was
discovered that 3% per cent of the
cars had seat belts available for one
or more occupants.
Also it was found that in the
automobiles equipped with - belts,
only a third of ihe belts were being
used,
Objections to seat belts include
cost, clutter .in the car, and taking
time to buckle and unbuckle them.
There is public inertia; ignorance
of the value of such a device, and
just plain dislike of seat belts.
Physicians inform their patients of
the possibility of reducing - serious
injury and death by the use of seat
belts.
There are eight reasons why a
woman buys sométhing: because
her husband says she can have it;
because it will make her look thin;
because it comes from Paris; because
the neighbors can’t afford it; be-
cause nobody else has one; because
everybody - sks one; nd ue be-
cause, iy x
indebted to said estate are |
Who's Afraid Of Halloween Witches?
Here they are out Halloweening,
neighborhood children asking for a
hand-out, threatening sliver of soap
in one hand, outspread paper bag
in the other, the same little goblins
that came to your door this past
weekend. Unmasked, first row, Dean
Hughes, Anne Crispell, Nancy, Dan-
ny and Jimmy Hughes. Second row.
Barbara Hughes, Nancy Crispell,
Allison Galletly, and Denise Gar=-
inger.
Photo By Kozemchak
Norm Smith Runs Across Rhode Island’s
Slant On What Happened 200 Years Ago
Hi Howard and Myra:
Thought you might be inter-
ested in this article my mother
sent me. Have you been up
to New England this summer?
Spent the summer at a camp
in Maine and when I returned
found all my Dallas Posts wait-
ing (made very interesting
reading all at one time).
© Phillis and'I want to say
hello.
Connecticut
Norm Smith
Editors Note: The clipping Norm
forwarded is from the column
“These Plantations” written by J.
E. Clauson in 1929 for Rhode Island
readers consumption. It follows:
Rambling through some age-yel-
lowed papers (which by the way
are habit-forming and if you
haven't fallen leave them alone) we
lighted on a phrase which hatched
out a line of reflection. The phrase
was Susquehanna Purchase; the
reflections boiled down to the con-
clusion that the fathers of this fair
patiimony were just as eager
rainbow-chasers as any of their
progeny of the present day down
to and including 1961.
‘When times were good the get-
rich-quickers and the better-your-
conditioners found pickings easy.
Prosperity always lay just over the
horizon. Fat, cheap land for all
and your money back if everything
wasn’t just as represented.
It wasn’t a bad gamble, either.
The New Englanders lost the game,
but by a narrow margin. Still, it
was rainbow chasing, and the
Rhode Islanders who took part
would have been happier if they
never had heard of the Susque-
hanna.
CONNECTICUT IDEA
WHICH WENT WRONG
You won't find much about the
Susquehanna’ Purchase in the his-
tory books. It was \one of those
bad investments whose promoters
preferred it should be forgotten. The
scheme originated in Connecticut
before the denizens of that ingeni-
ous State had learned to make
nutmegs of wood.
Charles the Second and his ad-
visers, who knew practically noth-
ing about American geography, had
given Connecticut in 1662 a charter
under which it laid claim a hundred
years later to a large chunk of what
now is Pennsylvania. The alleged
rights were to be sealed by purchase
from the Indians and by settlement.
In 1754 negotiations were begun
for buying from the Delaware In-
dians a huge stretch of wild scenery
between the Delaware and Susque-
hanna rivers. It comprised the
greater part of what now is Luzerne,
Wyoming, Susquehanna and Wayne
Counties and a part of Bradford.
The idea was that shares should
be held by men of property and the
lands sold to and settled by the
little fellows. An organization of
proprietors was effected, and dis-
trict agents were named in Rhode
Island.
Job Randall and Dr. Sphratn
Bowen were appointed in Provi-
dence County, Beriah Brown, sher-
iff and political boss, in Kings, Isaac
Tripp in Kent and Josias Lyndon in
Newport, They were the high pres-
sure boys as well as collectors of
taxes and levies.
Investors with ash in their £7
Kings County some of the Hazards
took a flyer and were followed by
others, planters and the rest. New-
port was just then riding on the
crest of the prosperity wave and
came across proper.
A colony of 240 men, some with
families, was collected in Rhode
Island and Connecticut and shipped
out. They established a settlment
called Wyoming. At a meeting at
Hartford in 1764 it was voted to
forward 300 more men and 50
barrels of pork for the 240 already
there.
Back in Connecticut, where ‘the
bad Indian days were all over, the
promoters laid out their distant
kingdom in great ease and security.
The map of the land as they cut it
up into townships shows the Rhode
Island and Connecticut influence.
One stream was named Narra-
gansett River. Among the townships
‘were Providencce, Canonicus. Mas-
sasoit, Squanto, Uncas, Sassacus and |
Winslow. Of all this careful plan-
ning hardly a familiar name re-
mains, There is a- Windham, whiéh
may have been suggested by
Windham, Conn.
Beriah Brown of North Kingstown
set out for the Susquehanna Pur-
chase once in 1762 with the laudable-
object of “fitting himself to give his
prospects the lowdown, but he
didn’t get there. He reported that
the Indian purchase had not been
completed. He might also have said
that the Delawares were an active
menace.
At just about the time of Brown's
trip, in fact, they were getting
ready to dig up the hatchet. They
had sold some of their land twice,
both times feeling terribly afterward
about having disposed of hunting
grounds, but not quite badly enough
to return the 2000 pounds the New
Englanders had paid.
Then in 1763 they attacked
Wyoming and killed 20 whites.
The other buyers besides the
Connecticut-Rhode Island syndicate
were Pennsylvanians, They had an
overlapping charter granted by
Charles the Second to William Penn
in 1681, 19 years later than the
Connecticut ‘charter. They had
bought from the Indians 18 years
before the Susquehanna Pee
negotiations were begun, and
1779 pushed an act through hots
legislature confirming their claims
to the section.
STUBBORN YANKEES
GET A COMPROMISE
This made things exceedingly
unpleasant for the New Englanders
who had gone there from New Eng-
land, braved Indians, cleared farms,
and built houses. The proprietors—/
the Pennsylvania crowd—began dis-
possessing the Yankees. What was
known as the first Pennamite war
started. The Yankees were dispos-
sessed five times, and ‘every time |
came back.
The Revolution brought an inter-
mission. After the independence
an agreement was reached to leave
the issue to five commissioners. This
body sat at Trenton 41 days, finally
reaching a decision that ‘“Connecti-
cut has no right to the land in
controversy.”
But the Tonksos, still held out.
Attempts to drive them from their
holdings were begun, vigorously
resisted, and lasted a year.
within Pennsylvania. It was to
include most of the Purchase. There
never was a chance of carrying the
scheme through, but so stubborn
was the Yankee resistance that at
length in 1787 a compromise was
reached which established the
claims of the proprietors, but gave
credits for other lands to settlers
driven from their clearings.
As for the Rhode Island investors, i.
we have seen notices of assessments,
but none of dividend payments. You
sometimes run across them in bun-
dles of brittle old papers which once
again we urge you to touch not,
taste not, handle not.
One morning the old-time judge
in a western mining camp opened
court with' the following announce-
ment:
“Gents, I have in hand a check—
a bribe you might call it—from the
plaintiff for $10,000 and , another
from the defendant for $15,000. I
propose to return $5,000 to the
defendant, and decide the case
strictly on its merits.”
Pennsylvania Game Commission
released 315,59 ringneck pheas-
ants this. year; 15,410 quail; 6,536
wild turkeys; 11,858 mallard ducks,
and 296 Canadian geese.
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
CONTACT LENSES
DR. Ll. BERGER
OPTOMETRIST
27 Machell Ave., Dallas
Phone OR 4-4921
ig ‘uM0110ABYS
1S Y3geT °N
‘1H ® '8qid JINOW
918S-¥ HO CH
EXPERT TAILORING
e Trouser Alterations
e Skirts & Dresses Hemmed
e® Coat Alterations
® Shirts Laundered
Cleaning & Pressing
ADAMS
Back Mt. Shopping Center
; Shavertown
~ Open Til 9 Every Night 5
BR
».
* nn
pr
Enel =
—~ ERNE E EISEN ERR AANA AN ARERR ERNE NNR RENNER REE NEE NERA nan REA RENNER EA Bape naan R BERANE RE RRRR RRR
>