The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 14, 1963, Image 2

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“THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
“More Than A Newspaper,
Now In Its 73rd Year”
» A mowpartisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub-
A Community Institution
«7! hished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
8 Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
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Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
Member National Editoria: Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
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Publishers Association
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pit six months. Out-of-State subscriptions;
year; $2.50 six months,
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
~ pa.p-Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879.
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Subcription rates: $4.00 a
$4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
“scripts, photographs and editorial matter
«Stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be
held for more than 30 days.
unless self-addressed,
When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked
to give their old as well as new address.
Allow two weeks for changes of address or mew subscriptions
go be placed on mailing list.
The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local
“hospitals.
If you are a patient ask your nurse for it.
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 g specific issue.
Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which
has not previously appeared in publication.
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
X {londay 5 P.M.
Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged
at 85¢c per column inch.
Classified rates 5¢ per word. Minimum if charged $1.00.
Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtained every Thursday
morning at the following newstands: Dallas - - Bert’s Drug Store.
lonial Restaurant, Daring’s Mark_i, Gosart’s Market,
Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's
Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory's Store, ' Trucksville Drugs;
Idetown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kockers’s
Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary.
Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store;
*Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern-
brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant;
Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY
Lssociate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS
Sports—JAMES LOHMAN
Accounting—DORIS MALLIN
Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS
From—
Pillar To Post...
By Hix
Ever sit down at a typewriter and attack a column, cold turkey?
It can’t be dome.
The only possible time for writing a column is
when the linotyper comes teaming out of the back room, stating in
plain and fancy English that she now has the double-column spac-
ing on the machine, and WHERE IS THAT PILLAR TO POST?
This gonfrontation with a dead-line spurs the intellect, and
causes deep delving in the dark recesses of the subconscious, where
suitable items may be expected to lurk, waiting to be hauled out
by the tail, the same technique that is employed in capturing a kitten
which has exposed itself to a relentless hand while convinced
that it is completely’ hidden under the Frankln Stove.
Out it comes, backspacing valiantly, its toenails clicking on the
stone floor.
There is a supersititution on the part of cat-lovers that a kitten’s
tail will come off in the hand if used as a handle.
This is a fallacy.
The kittens tail is firmly attached, and it is remotely enough
spaced from the spitting, howling front of the culprit which has" just
made a mistake in a corner, to insure safety for the chastening hand.
But don’t ever try to pick up a monkey by the tail.
Chi-Chi, the Dallas Post monkey, now relegated to
has resources.
A monkey
the basement has always been able to scale the arm of anybody
illadvised enough to attempt this maneuver, teeth bared, small and
wrinkled face purpling in rage, marrow-spaced eyes glittering, jaws
champing in anticipation.
A monkey’s tail is to all intents and purposes a fifth extension
of a body, as operational as legs or arms.
And that having been firmly established . . .
: No, Mrs. Lutsey,
in spite of the double-column set-up on the linotype machine, THERE
ISN'T ANY PILLAR TO POST THIS WEEK.
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Happened
30 Years Ago
Governor Gifford Pinchot’s 20,-
000 mile network of inexpensive
roads was already showing defects.
Reason given by engineer Julius Al-
der, nmon-adherence to long estab-
lished principles of highway con-
struction.
People were using more wood for
fuel than at any other time since
World War I. Supply was plentiful,
easily accessible in the Back Mount-
ain.
Dallas Borough High School de-
feated Laketon, girls’ team lost to
Laketon.
[Jessie Brickel Bible Class pre-
sented two short plays to a capacity
crowd at Dallas Borough High
School. A feature of the program
was a band performance directed by
Ralph Rood.
You could get kid bedroom slip-
pers for $1 a pair; bread, 3 loaves
for a dime; apple butter, two jars
for two bits; evaporated milk, tall
can, 5 cents; soup beans two Pounds
for 3 cents.
Annual report of Leonard E. Mor-
gan, Controller of Luzerne County,
covering two pages of close type,
probably gave the hard-pressed
Dgllas Post a breathing spell.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Ration board explained that the
ban on pleasure driving and reduced
speed limits were primarily to save
rubber, not gas, during the National
emergency.
Big draft call included 28 local
men, some in the 18-year old group.
Called for examination were John
J. Miller, Harry A. Boehme, Walter
A. Meade, William A. Roberts, Fran-
cis D. Polachek, Nicholas Stredny,
Ernest Wood, Leon Emmanuel, Char-
les Matey, Joseph C. Wallo, Arthur
Houck, Michael P. Sedler, Louis
Cardinale, Kenneth Trudgen, Mi-
chae] DeMuro, Charles Metzgar, Wil-
liam Malkemas, Samuel Green, Le-
Roy Trudgen, Cedric Griffiths, Har-
old Fritzges, Frank Billings, Leo
Baranowski, Harold Cook, Chester
Dalley, Bernard Wisniewski, Nath-
aniel Casterline, Calvin Weaver.
Carl Carey, Trucksville Marine,
related his adventures when the
USS Lexington went down. He was
wounded in action off Guadalcanal,
transferred to a hospital in Brisbane,
flown across the Pacific, and finally
came home on leave.
Melvin Swingle, 55, suffered sev-
ere head injuries when run down
by defense worker James Ira Brown.
Brown lost his license, was fined
$100.
Servicemen heard from: John Jo-
seph, SanFrancisco APO; Howard
Carey, New York APO; Albert Gar-
inger, Colorado; Glenn Kitchea,
Michigan; Earl Mason, Kansas; Peter
Skopic, Fort Meade; Alfred Nulton,
Pine Camp; Loren Fritz, Lawson
General Hospital; Bud Kern and
Tom Garrity, Miami.
Died: Livingston L. Gates, 80,
Chase farmer, of a stroke. Mrs. Gert-
trude Honeywell, 92, native of Beau-
mont. Mrs. Emma Hunter, 94, Dall-
as, of pneumonia. Zebulon Orville
Rummage, 69, Huntsville, heart
attack.
Married: Mrs. Lenora, Honeywell
to M. C. Keeney.
Guilyn Evans was
Trucksville postmaster,
Mrs. Jane Loman.
1
appointed
succeeding
Reading Script For Misericordia Children’s Theatre
College Misericordia Children’s
Theatre will open its program with
MacAlvay and Chorpenning’s “The
Elves and the Shoemaker,” a play
originally produced dt the Goodman
‘ Children’s Theatre of Chicago's Art
Institute. The’ play carries prestige | Maria Manganella, Maureen Ims, and
* as one of the Goodman Theatre pro-
ductions. It is especially enhanced |left, are Theresa Pacewicz, Mary
by the reputation of Charlotte Chor-
penning, a pioneer in the develop-
ment of good theatre for children.
Rehearsals are now in progress at
Misericordia under direction of Ger-
ald Godwin, head of the department
of drama. A group of the players
are seen here at a script reading.
Seated in foreground, from left, are
Virginia McBride. In the rear, from
Brophy, Barbara Hanlon, and Vir-
ginia, Burke,
As College Misericordia initiates
its new Children’s Theatre program,
the college administration presents
its effort as a different educational
and cultural service to Wyoming
Valley. Misericordia’s policy in its
Children’s Theatre is to present
plays cocurricular on all levels. in
order to support literature curric-
um and also to build artistic apprec-
iation and sense of discrimination in
: | tion,
eT
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963
A EE EE NE RN XNS HNN HHH HHH HHH HRN NHK
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters
PRAIA ER
A very common family name in
the rural area toward the river at"
Falls, particularly in Exeter Town-
ships in two counties, is Sickler. No |
genealogy has been located, and it
seems to be impossible to line up
one as there are so many named! Allen (1846-1904).
Sickler, none of whom seem to
know anything back farther than
their own grandfathers.
One of the county histories refers
to one Zachariah ‘Sickler, who emi-
grated from Germany as a young
man and settled in New York State.
He may, or may not, have been the
father of several Sickler young men
who came from New York State,
early in the 1800s. Listed as one
son is James (1798-1863), who came
from New York State when about
20 years old, married Eliza Mon-
tanye. They are buried in the ceme-
tery between Harding and Falls
variously called Mt. View, Baldwin,
and other names. They had five
sons. One named Earl (1825-1910)
married Elizabeth B. Skedden
(1832-1909), both buried in the
same cemetery.
Of the same generation as James,
maybe his brother, was Jacob (1777-
1830) who married Hannah Chat-
field (1786-1868), both buried at
Falls. About the same age was Will-
iam, who died in 1836. He may have
been of one generation older, the
same as Zachariah, William is the
only one whose family has been
listed anywhere found so far, and
will be shown together below.
Sicklers are also found in a small
cemetery at the junction of routes
92 and 292 variously called Sickler,
Swartwood, and Forest Hill Ceme-
tery. Merritt Sickler’ (1839-1894)
and his wife Elizabeth Linskill
(1833-1916) are buried at Lehman.
A girl, Mahala (1806-1822), is bur-
ied at Osterhout. Lyman (1823-
1916) is buried at Noxen, and one
of several named Jacob (1840-1928)
is buried at Perrins Marsh. A Pru-
dence, (1802-1870) wife of John, is
buried at Mt. View. Oldest marked
grave in the old Sickler or Forest
Hill Cemetery is Peter (1802-1879),
probably but not certainly, of the
same family as James and Jacob
above mentioned. Peter's wife was
Permilla.
In what was probably the next
generation we find at Falls, Jacob
(1810-1855), Abigail (1814-1852)
wife of Jacob. Elsewhere Elizabeth
(1816-1896), Robert (1817-1900).
Also at Falls, George (1824-1881)
and his wife Sarah (1826-1895), Ril-
EE A SE 3 I A SR HH HH HHH HRA RIN
ey (1833-1913), Perry (1837-1906),
and elsewhere of the same group
Ziba (1828-1896), and Charlotte
(1833-1902). |Among others in Fitch
‘Cemetery at Lockville are Charles
(1847-1923) and his wife Nancy J.
Another George
(1833-1889) is buried at Forest Hill,
also Dennis (1837-1912).
The following is from the Michael
Shoemaker Book by William T.
Blair, somewhat condensed. William
Sickler of Exeter Township, Luzerne
County, died March 30, 1836 and
his widow Mrs. Ruth Sickler was
married (2) to Robert A. Kesley.
Children of William were (order of
birth uncertain): 1. John; 2. Eliza-
beth (1801-1888), married Alexan-
der Swartwood; 3. Hannah, married
Lewis Mericle; 4. Sarah E., married
to Peter P. Schooley, son of Nathan-
iel; 5. Janet, married Alexander
Ray; 6. Jacob (1810-1855), married
Elizabeth, daughter of Nathaniel
Schooley; 7. Ellen, married to: Ste-
phen Davenport; 8, George; 9. Will-
iam Jr.; 10. Isaac (1818-1865), mar-
ried Rachel Dickinson (1829-1898);
11. Nancy (1820-1902), married
Rev. William Gay; 12. Benjamin
(1823-1886), married to Eleanor
Eyet (1827-1905). Apparently all
the above were born in New York
State.
William Sickler, June 29, 1818,
bought land in Exeter and North-
moreland Townships. The family
lived on “Sickler Hill”, northwest
of present route 292 not far from
the junction with route 92 along
the river. Last of the family to live
there was the widow of Benjamin
and daughter Estelle (1865-1910).
Children of Benjamin and his wife
Eleanor Eyet were Charles, Alice,
Giles, Edward, Clayton, Sarah, Or-
pha, Stella, (Estelle) and Layton.
The children of William and Ruth
Sickler are buried at Forest Hill,
Fitch, and some other cemeteries.
No effort has been made to list
herein any recent Sicklers born
since 1850. There are therefore sev-
cra] generations, descendants of
those above listed. f anyone cun
turn up a genealogy, more informa-
tion will be shown in a later column.
And, as in other families, there
are probably many buried out of this
area, or nearby in unmarked grav-
€s. Some may have been overlooked.
The Michael Shoemaker Book and
some of the burial records above
are on file at Wyoming Historical
and Geological Society.
It Happened
10 Years Ago
Dallas Women’s Club started The |
Value Shop, an outlet for used and
usable clothing.
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Owens were
home after two years in Germany,
ready for Dr. Owens to set up a
dental] office in Dallas.
Reese Pelton resigned from the
faculty at Dallas-Franklin to dicect
instrumental music at Forty-Fort.
Robert Johnson received the God
and Country award in Boy Scouting
at Trucksviic Methodist Chuich;
1952 winner, Robert Davis, received
a Life Scout Badge.
rs. Elizabeth Warden, Haris
Road, celebrated her 85th birth-
day; Ben Hightower his 88th.
Wyoming Valley Playground and
Recreation Association sponsored
evening classes for adults at West-
moreland High School, offering sew-
ing, woodworking, ceramics, and art.
Died: Mrs. Nellie Pembleton Jones,
68, Lehman, Mrs. Mary Stolarick,
Lehman.
Steak was 69 cents a pound,
ground beef 43, frankfurters 45.
. « « Safety
MORE ABOUT JULI
Dear Mrs. Hicks, Father called me
i yesterday to read to me a fat head-
line in the Dallas Post about me and
my music, and he suggested that I
send a dollar to the Post and ask to
have as many copies of same as a
dollar will buy. Enclosed is a dol-
lar for that purpose; but I thought
I would send it to you personally,
because 1 figured you must be at
the bottom of such an article—with
maybe. a putting-together-of-heads
with Ruth Gilmartin, as to
Christmas card material. It was so
funny to find myself in the Post
again,
I am working for a master’s de-
gree at the Manhattan School of
Music, in New York, where I go
every fifth week for a week of les-
sons. Have joined and become sec-
retary of the Cleveland Composers’
Guild.
The piano pieces mentioned in the
article are Lento and Presto, and
they won a national competition for
solo piano composition in April of
1962. They have been performed
by a number of pianists, including
Andrius Kuprevicius and Ralph Vo-
tapek (the winner this year of the
first Van Cliburn International Con-
test in Fort Worth), and the record-
ing pianist is to be Arthur Loesser,
head, of piano at the Cleveland In-
stitute of Music. They are to be
recorded by Composers Recordings,
Inc., which does a lot of work in
contemporary music,
I have written a symphonic tone
poem, a string quartet, a one act
opera, a song cycle for baritone and
orchestra, and music for unaccom-
panied chorus. Am working at
present, a work for soloists, mixed
chorus, and orchestra — this being
my master’s thesis — will probably
take me years, at the rate I can
work . . . . My teachers are, for
piano, David Jatovsky of Forest
Hills, New York, and for composi-
Vittorio Giannini, Nicholas
Flagello, and Ludmilla Ulehla, of
New York.
So much for that... itis a
great deal of work, and I wouldn't
have missed it for the world.
Strange to remember the early be-
ginnings, in the little ballets for
Barbara Weisberger — written be-
fore 1 had any notion about what I
was doing — when I look at them
now, I have to smile, but I confess
it is a fond smile, for without them,
the young theatre goer.
1 wouldn’y have had the opportunity
Valve
to study music at all, probably. But
they are the sort of things a com-
poser retires from public view.
Best wishes,
Juli Nunlist
Ed. Note: Howzabout settling for
some clippings for free, plus one
copy of the entire Dallas Post as a
frame of reference? Enclosed please
find one buck. The achievements
sound stupendous. Some day we'll
all be saying, “We knew , her
when . .” Good luck and good
wishes from the folks who knew you
best in the Back Mountain, and
especially from Hix.
Harold S. Hislop
Makes Dean's List
Harold Somers Hislop, son of Mr.
and Mrs, Robert K. Hislop, Me-
oopany, formerly of Dallas, has been
placed on the Dean’s List for special
recognition for the Fall Semester,
1962-63 at Wingate College. Stu-
dents must average 3.3 or better
and carry fifteen semester hours to
be considered for the Dean’s List. .
A four-year football player for
Dallas High School,
1962. He was a senior officer and
an officer in the Key Club.
Makes Dean's List
At Susquehanna
Marilyn Hck, a freshman from
Shavertown, is one of 57 Susque-
hanna University students named to
the Dean’s List for the first semes-
ter of the 1962-63 school year.
Miss Eck, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Fck, Shavertown, is a
1961 graduate of Dallas High Schooi.
where she was active in the band,
chorus, Honor Society, Student
Council, basketball and Tri-Hi~Y.
She is majoring in liberal arts.
Last year, as a Rotary Exchange
student, she studied in South Africa.
Students must attain an academic
average of at least 3.4 out of a
possible 4.0 to qualify for the Dean's
List,
THE DALLAS POST
OFFSET DEPARTMENT
Is One Of The Finest
In Pamsylvania
Fry The Post Offset
a
Better Leighton Never
by Leighton Scott
LOOK OUT, THERE!
Dallas Township Police Chief
Frank Lange has received lots of
calls about stray dogs lately, but the
corker, he says, is the lady who re-
ported and threatened to sue the
owner of one she fell over while it
was walking around her yard.
THREE EXTRA BEAVERS
Back Mountain enjoys an unusual
position during the beaver season,
which starts Saturday. We straddle
the county line well into Wyoming
County, and so Luzerne County res-
idents can take advantage of a 1963
limit for our neighbor of six beav-
ers, instead of the usual three.
Ralph Dula, veteran beaver trap-
per and member of Harveys Ldke
Rod and Gun Club, says the only
way to get your six is either to trap
the six in Wyoming County or three
in Luzerne County and three up
north. In either case, the overall
limit is never more than six.
Each pelt is worth about $10.54.
OLD-TIMERS AND NEW-COMERS
Every once in ig while, D. A. Wat-
ers, the Old-Timer, writes about
ancient families of this area, lining
up genealogies back to the Revolu-
tion and before.
I always like toread about them,
even though I'm a newcomer like 4
many residents of Dallas and Kings-
ton Township suburbia. (Of course,
I'm cheating a little if I don’t add
that I've spent most holidays here
since I was a kid.)
But even if you've just been mov-
ed here by a big impersonal com-
pany, and for all you care you might
be in Akron, Ohio, you can get a
kick out of reading these names
back into local history. And when
you do, youll find the phone book
one of your text-books, because a
lot of names and addresses haven't
changed in 200 years.
Plainly we newcomers can't help
but feel a certain kinship wir a tke
cld families if we love this area, be-
cause it was theirs first.
Maybe I credit them with the good
sense their ancestors had in settling
here, but more likely it’s that I
credit them with the good sense
they had in staying here.
Dan Waters discusses the Sicklers,
for example, this week. Among
many families, they migrated south
not very long after the same land
they now farm in Franklin Town-
ship was part of Westmoreland
County, Connecticut. That’s right,
Connecticut.
Dr. Budd Schooley and I walked
around Orcutt Cemetery not too
long ago, and 1 looked at graves
marked 1778, and the same name
on them adorning business signs just
down the road. In fact, the Schooley
name is cut there in markers just
ag cld.
Over the years, Mr, Waters has
recommended several books well
worth reading, if you can find then.
Among them are “History of Certi-
fied Township of Kingston” and
“Early Settlement of Dallas Town-
slip”.
I glso recommend (even harder
to find) The Dallas Post, November
27, 1953, the “brown issue”, which
was actually printed on brown
paper and is now brown with age.
That paper contains histories of all
local townships and the borough, as
| well as of fire and ambulance com-
panies and many other items.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
of which he
was co-captain, Hislop graduated in |
FINAL
CLEARANCE
SHOES
(Broken Sizes
§2-§3-84-59-56
Values - $10.95
BOOTS
2-83 -M
Values to $5.95
Nylon Corduroy
and
Brushed Nylon
OXFORDS
$2.19
Reg. $4.95
Famous Make
HUMPHREYS
Children’s Bootery
Back Mountain
Shopping Center
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Shavertown
One of the toughest battles one |
must face is helplessness in the pro-
gress of a deadly disease.
It takes more than courage to
present a calm, unruffled counten-
ance when a loved one pleads for
aid from agonizing pain. No onc can
imagine the deep despair a husband,
wife or parent must undergo when
day after day, increasing suffering
taxes both patient and family in its
relentless sweep toward merciful
oblivion.
To those who have financial
means it can prove a costly exper-
ience but to others in a lower earn-
ing bracket it can spell disaster.
In admiration of a young man’s
tremendous effort to assure his
stricken wife that all was well and
| to calm her growing concern with
the greatest devotion, kindliness
and patience we have witnessed in
many a day, we have started a fund
in his |
We cannot compensate for his
loss, but in a small way we can
render assistance.
Roy Elliott, the first to respond,
has been a tremendous source of
encouragement, Bob Parry was en-
thusiastic when contacted. The res-
ponse of local establishments was
instantaneous. Wallie Gosart, Shel
Evans, Humphreys’ Kiddie Shoppe,
McCrory’s, Dicton’s Bakery, Brace's
Coffee Shop and Back Mountain
Lumber and Coal Company all joined
in the effort.
Containers specifying the King
Fund are on the counters in all these
stores. Roy Elliott, Bob Parry and
this correspondent will make the
final accounting.
‘We ask only that you will rally
te our call. Let’s be a good neigh-
bor.
Representative From Africa Speaks
A large representation was on
hand Sunday evening at the Family
Night Supper held at Shavertown
Methodist Church. Guest speaker
was Rev. Robert G. H. Kelly, Cape-
town, Africa. A trumpet trio, com:
prised of John Wardell, Donald
Anderson and Paul Jenkins offered
musical selections,
Spaghetti Supper
Luther League of St. Paul's Luth-
eran Church will hold a Spaghetti
Supper on Saturday evening begin-
ping at 5 pm.
Additional Heart Aides
Mrs, John H. D. Ferguson announ-
ces the committee which will assist
her in the Heart Fund Drive this
month: Mesdames Ben Kleppinger,
Vernon Ash, Robert Jewell, Charles
Nicol, Charles Lockhard, Malcolm
Kitchen, Obed Hontz, Wilson Hon-
eywell,. William Tippett, Gilbert
Robinson, Frank Wadas, Thomnas
Heffernan, Harold Young; Misses
Barbara Daubert, Alice Jones, Char-
lutte Roherts, Gail Lamoreaux.
Personals
Mrs. William Brown, Jr., Psesin
Avenue, is a patient in Nesbitt
Hospital.
Sincere sympathy is extended to
Mrs. Ted Poad, Mrs. William Eike
and Mrs. George Hooper in their
recent bereave:me:nts.
Mr. end Mrs. Ralph Morris, Le-
high Street, will move shortly to
Scranton.
© Mrs. Samuel Leslie, Queens, N.Y,
and Mrs. Thomas Reilly, Darby, Pa.,
'FORTY-FORT
THEATRE
Tonight, Friday,
Saturday, Sunday,
Monday, Tuesday
p
4
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;
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.
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(Con’t. Sun. 8-11)
Anthony Quinn's
VV VV VV
“Barahbas”
Muscular Aches and
SYMPTOMS
(Possibly as high as 104), dry cough, sore
Throat and Headaches.
The Public Health Service Says:
feel any or all of these symptoms — go to
bed, take liquids and
ASPIRIN
— Call Your Doctor — >
~ 500 Rexall Pure ASPIRIN
~— Guaranteed Quality — Fast Acting —
‘1.69
recently spent a few days with their
sister, Mrs. C, Morris King, E. Cen-
ter Street. They came up to attend
the funeral of her daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Ear] King. :
It was good to sze Mrs. Lewis
Cottle visiting in our area last week.
She has made a splendid recovery
from a long illness. Mrs. Cottle is
ong oi those wonderful mothers who
have shared their love and their
home with little ones who need
someone who cares. She has done a
fine joh.
Mrs. Warren Long, Inman Street,
has returned home after spending
two weeks in Glen, Ridge and Dover)
N.J..
Robert Walp, son of Mr. and Mrsgh
Ralph Walp, Jr., Lehigh Street, re®”
sumed classes at Wilkes College last
week. :
Keller Class will meet Friday eve-
ning at 8 p.m. in the social rooms
of Shavertown Methodist Church.
One of the loveliest student nurs-
es at Nesbitt Hospital is Frances
Lenahan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
E. F. Lenahan, Mt. Airy Road. Fran-
ces will complete her studies this
year.
John Ferguson, Lawn Street,
seriously ill at his home. :
George Bednar, Jr., junior at
Notre Dame, Indiana, has resumed
classes after spending the mid term
recess with this mother, Mrs. George
Bednar, Sr., Hazeltine Street.
Worthy Citizen
One of the hardest working men
in our town is William Frederick,
captain of the ambulance crew. Bill
is always on the go, to an accident,
a scout meeting or any other worth-
while cause. Laurels aiso to his
good wife, Eleanor, who handles all
‘Birthdays
Birthday greetings this week *
James Sisco, Jr., William Morris, Jr.,
Mrs. Henry Van Horn, Donald Hink
le, Patricia Shonk, Lucille Spaciano,
Donna LaBarr, James Campbell,
Warren Evans, Rosellen Kiaboe,
Cathy Coates, Nancy Neikam, Don-
ald Edwards, Gilbert Robinson, Car-
ri Ellen Sisco, Florence Averett, H.-
H. Rymer, Frank Wadas, Jr., Mrs.
Charles Perry, Gordon Evans, Judy
Rorick, Edwin Lumley, Mrs. Millie
Elston, H. Harrison Cook and
Georgette Swan, Thomas Lee Camp
bell, Mary Alice Lumley, James
George Smith, Edwin Guernsey,
Jeanne D. Glahn.
Mrs. Charles Howe and Ruthellen
Hammond made a trip last week to
bring home Mrs. Mary Chapple, who
spent several weeks visiting her
daughter, Mrs. R. B. Hammond,
Philadelphia.
Fourth Birthday
Barbara Ann Voelker, daughter of
Bob and Ruth Voelker, ceicbrated
her fourth birthday last Wednes-
day. Her father observed his anni-
versary op turday. The family
gathered for the celebration.
LUZERNE
THEATRE
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| calls and emergencies.
Last Times Tonight
Glenn Ford
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“Four Horsemen
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Of Apocalypse
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& GIFT NIGHT
¢ Choice of William Rogers
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Silverplate or Fine
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ESL ATS
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Fri - Sat. - Sun
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Paing, Chills, fever
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C VANS DRUG STORE
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Shavertown
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