The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 02, 1963, Image 2

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    ~ SECTION A — PAGE 2
' THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
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“More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
Now In Its 73rd Year”
: A non-partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Ine.
year; $2.50 six months.
six months.
held for more than 30 days.
to be placed on mailing lst.
Transient rates 80.
Monday 5 P.M.
at 85¢ per column inch.
Batered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Subcription rates: $4.00 a
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢.
We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed,
stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be
When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked
to give their old as well as new address. :
Allow two weeks for change of address or new subscription
The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local
hospitals. I 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 a specific issue.
Preference will in all intances be given to editorial matter which
has not previously appeared in other publications.
National display advertising rates 84c per column inch.
Political advertising $.85, $1.10, $1.25 per inch
Preferred position additicnal 10c per inch. Advertising deadline
‘Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged
Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.15.
Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtained every Thursday
morning at the following newstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store,
Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Market, Gosart's Market,
Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's
Drug Store; Trucksville — Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy;
Idetown — (Cave’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher's
Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman—Stolarick’s Store;
Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern-
brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaur-
ant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone’s Grocery.
La
who shoplift as a lark.
for the property of others?
years.)
f or shoplifting.
down the aisles?
onto the floor?
regard for ownership.
cannot be overestimated.
good working condition.
if necessary.
with nothing in his mouth.
-
A
RE
® Mrs, Rachel Porter, member of
$Dallas School faculty will retire at
| "the close of the present school term
e after thirty three years of service,
Mtwenty six at Shavertown Grade
School.
# Mrs. Porter will be honored at
the Spring Dinner of the Pennsyl-
wania State Education Association
%of Dallas Area at Irem Temple
Country Club Saturday evening.
® A graduate of Kingston High
«School and Bloomsburg Normal
School, Mrs. Porter taught at
“Kingston Borough prior to her
itenure in the Back Mountain area.
During the intervening years she
itook advanced work at Wilkes
«College.
> Active in a number of organiza-
tions, Mrs. Porter has been especial-
Jy interested in youth work.
» Assisted by Mrs, Russell Houser,
Mrs. Porter organized the Football
Mothers Club serving as its first
hairman. During her term of of-
" fice the group raised funds with the
«help of Rotary, Lions and Kiwanis
"Clubs to buy the players and sec-
‘ond team jackets.
Keep right on frustrating Jimmie.
‘Editorially Speaking:
Hands Off, Jimmie
The mounting incidence of petty thievery is making
headlines in periodicals and newspaper editorials. Shop-
lifting is becoming a commonplace. .
There is much beating of breasts about “teen-agers”
Okay, where does it start, this complete disregard
Does it start with the teenagers?
It does NOT start with the teenagers.
body better invent another name for boys and girls who
are beyond the stage of being children, not quite mature
enough for adults, and are therefore considered to be liv-
ing in a never-never land where they can’t be spanked,
and where they are immune to all the responsibilities
which will hit them like 4 load of bricks in a few short
(And some-
All right, it does not start with teenagers.
You young mothers, face up to it; you are responsible
When you take little Jimmie into a grocery store,
do you keep him with you as you trundle your cart up and
Or do you let him roam the store, picking up any-
thing that appeals to him, sampling the candies, poking
his fingers into the cookies, knocking the cereal boxes
It’s natural for him to experiment?
Of course it’s natural for him to experiment, but
civilization is not built on a foundation of being natural.
It is built on a foundation of NOT being natural, but of
conforming to accepted social behavior.
A primitive savage will grab what he sees, with no
You are rearing a solid citizen, not a savage.
How Jimmie acts on his first visit to the grocery
will shape his entire future approach to grocery stores.
The importance of getting off on the right foot simply
Teach him to keep his hands off, look but not touch.
Once he finds that he can pick up something which
does not belong to him, he is on the road to petty thievery.
And don’t worry too much about the dangers of his
being frustrated. Life is full of frustrations.
It wouldn't be safe to walk down the street or drive a
car or step outdoors at night if frustrations were not in
With a_paddle,
; See that he goes out through the turnstile with noth-
ing that does not belong to him in his pants pocket, and
It is not fair to Jimmie to let him get away with it.
Fellow Educators Will Honor
‘Veteran Teacher At Dinner
»
pa
In 1933, she served as a member
of the committee which organized
the first PTA in Kingston Township.
She was a charter member of the
Kingston Township Band Associa-
tion and recalls ringing doorbells
for donations to purchase material
for capes and hats in which to dress
band members.
Her record in Girl Scouting has
been an outstanding one, culminat-
ing in the award of a thirty five
year pin by the Wilkes-Barre Coun.
cil. She had previously received a
Thank You Badge.
Mrs. Porter organized the first
girl scout troops in Shavertown,
Trucksville, Fernbrook and Lehman
and ithe Dallas District Council,
serving as its first chairman. -
For ten summers she served as
Director and Supervisor of Work
Camps in Connecticut, recruiting 250
boys and girls and staff members
for five camps each year.
In her spare time she gained
recognition among church groups
and organizations as a director of
religious dramas, minstrel shows,
Tom Thumb weddings and plays.
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Happened
30 Years Ago
Dallas Township School Board
approved an eight mill decrease and
Kingston Township a two mill cut
in school taxes.
First National Bank of Dallas re-
ported a large amount of gold cer-
tificates and coins turned in for re-
demption following President Roose-
velt’s order.
Fire destroyed a stable and store-
room at the Monastery of the
Congregation of Jesus at Harvey's
Lake.
Sunday’s traffic was
heaviest during the year in this
area.
Members of Kingston and Dallas
Townships and Dallas Borough met
at the Old Orchard Packing Com-
pany to discuss matters of common
interest.
‘Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Steph-
en Lord, Sweet Valley, celebrated
‘50th wedding anniversary.
Died: Winifred Griffith, 46, Dallas.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
William Hillard Conyngham, 74,
owner ' of Hillside amd Orchard
Farms, died after a brief illness.
Grant Thomas was reported a
prisoner of the Japs.
Thelma Gregory enlisted in the
Marine Corps. ;
Servicemen heard from: Lloyd
Garinger, Joseph Hudak, Glenn
Kitchen, Emory Kitchen, James
Murphy, Alfred Roman, W. E. Ray,
Ray Schultz, Walter Pilger, Bill Mc- ,
Intyre, Harold Casterline, George
London, John Culp, Jr., Howard
Johns, Louis Kelly, Edward Hart-
man, Tom . Cadwalader, Wilford
Montross, ;
Marriages: . Elnor Smith, Jack-
son, to Sgt. Alfred Swelgin, Jack-
son; Marjorie Mekeel, Trucksville, to
Paul Walter, New Brittain, Conn.;
Ethel DeReemer, Fernbrook, to Nor-
man Frantz, Alderson.
Died: Luther Dymond, 72, Dy-
mond Hollow; Edward Swartwood,
Huntsville.
Anniversaries: Fred Boote,
Trucksville, celebrated his 87th
birthday.
kk Happened
I0 Years Ago
Ground was broken for the new
$210,000 Ross Elementary School.
Dallas Township operated speed
trap for first time.
The advantages of jointure and
what it had meant to Kingston
Township and Dallas Borough was
disclosed at a dinner meeting of
directors and school officials at
Westmoreland High School cafete-
ria.
Three generations of Ecks were
present at St. Paul's Father and Son
Dinner: John Eck, grandfather,
Fred Eck, father, and Jack Eck, son.
Two Icelanders, Joe Magnusson
and Geir Gudnason, visiting at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks,
observed that Dallas area was cold-
er than their native land.
Parents were ordered to pay van-
dal damage inflicted by their chil-
dren on Church Street. :
Dallas-Franklin and Lake-Noxen
School directors met at Lake High
School to discuss problems of their
respective school districts.
Marriages: Louise Kunkle, Kun-
kle, to Goodwin Hilburt, Beaumont.
Anniversaries: Mr. and Mrs. Ar-
thur Ehret, Lehman, celebrated
their 40th wedding anmiversary.
George Pollock, Carverton, celebrat-
ed his 86th birthday.
Died: Mrs. Euphamia Lutes, 81,
Beaumont.
Answer Omitted
L. L. Richardson, running for
Dallas school director answered five
questions in last week’s question-
naire to candidates.
The answer to his reason for feel-
ing qualified, accidently deleted,
was:
“Because of my business back-
ground. A good businessman is
needed on the Board. Educational
problems should be left to Dr.
Robert Mellman.”
Mrs. Porter is a member of Shav-
ertown Methodist Church, its Offi~
cial Board, and the Executive Board
of the WSCS. She is Promotion
Chairman of the WSGS and presi-
dent of the Keller Class.
A member of the NEA and PSEA,
she is also affiliated with Shaver-
town PTA, No. 90 Order of Eastern
Star, Black Diamond Post .395
American Legion Auxiliary, Back
Mountain Career Woman, and Girl
Scout Troop Committee.
The wife of Martin Porter, presi-
dent of Kingston Township Ambu-
lance Association, Mrs. Porter's
proudest achievement has been the
rearing of her four children John,
Shavertown, who is a salesman for
Westinghouse; Mildred, industrial
nurse for the National Three A’s
in Washington, D. C.; Mary, wife
of Dr. Carl T. Evans, Homestead,
Florida; and William, who died at
age 12 in 1946.
She has five grandchildren: John-
nie, Pamela and Sally Porter, Shav-
ertown Mary and Thomas Evans,
Florida.
Not only has she taught hundreds
of children from the Back Mountain
area but each of her own and more
recently grandson Johnnie,
reported |
junder Truman, the longest period
speeches, ‘at every opportunity, It
a
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 2,1963
RR RE RN NR HEH CH NEE HEH HHH HHH RH RAR RRKY
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer
— D. A. Waters
CHK HHH NHRHNEKRK
THE SECRET DIARY OF HAR-
OLD L. ICKES (1933-36). 738 pp.
New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc.
Price missing.
This is one of those very heavy
thick books ‘that stand around for
years awaiting a fortunate combina-
tion of time and ambition to get
started to read them, but turn out
to be well worth the effort, and
make you regret that reading did
not start sooner. Quotation from
the book is not permitted. The Diary
was really secret.
formation contained would have
raised a furor if openly stated at the
time. It is now an even thirty years
since the first stirring days of THE
NEW DEAL. This book refreshes
the memory.
Born and reared in Pennsylvania
of Republican ancestry, Ickes later
became a lawyer in Illinois. He
supported various independent camn-
didates and was an active member
of the Bull Moose movement in
1912. Due to a deaf ear he served
in the YMCA in France in World
War I. He kept up relations with
all the leading surviving Progres-
sives including Hiram Johnson,
George W. Norris, Gerald P. Nye, all
in Congress in the period covered,
also Gifford Pinchot, then Governor
of Pennsylvania, amd many others,
whose names appear frequently
throughout the book.
He vigorously supported Roose-
velt in 1932 and after election asked
two men to intercede for a job for
him. It turned out that both the
men were offered the job of Secre-
tary of the Interior and turned it
down, but neither was asked for
suggestions and could not recom-
mend him. Later after others also
had refused, Roosevelt offered him
the post which he held all through
Roosevelt's lifetime and for a while
in history. Only a few years before
his department had been rocked
with the Teapot Dome and other
scandals. He succeeded in maintain=-
ing a reputation for integrity in an
atmosphere in which it appeared to
be the exception, rather than the
rule.
Much of the in- "ey
Throughout the book he felt he
was under attack from various’
sources, and was jealous of his posi- |
tiom, prerogatives, responsibilities, i
and reputation. Admitting that he
never made a really effective speech
in his life before, he made a lot of
was his practice to have his staff
work up the necessary facts and
figures and other information, them
he did a lot of work whipping the
speeches into shape. He was exas-
perated one time when Stanley
High tried to take credit for a
speech, which Ickes had only shown
him, and which was his own werk.
By his own definition he came to be
called” “The Old Curmudgeon”, in
the sense of a.churlish person.
Ickes confirms many things about
Washington in those days, some
commonly known and some suspect-
ed. It was almost unbearably hot
much of the time. All the govern-
ment officials and many lower level
employes were almost swamped by
the round of dinmers, receptions,
3 A HNN ENS
complains almost all the time of
feeling under par, due mostly to the
outside ‘activities. His sleep was
unsatisfactory. Almost every night
he had to ‘take ‘‘soporifics’, one of
which was whiskey. And he realized
most of the time that he was under
nervous tension. Drinking was com-
mon everywhere at all levels, After
a party at his own house, Ickes re-
marks that the President carried his
liquor well. He must have had five
highballs after dinner and did mot
it. And Miss LeHand and
race Tully did not show any effects
either.
A subordinate placed in his de-
partment for political purposes is
plainly described as not worth a
damn for his proper duties. The
pulling and hauling for spending
privileges between agencies is fully
described. He was in charge of
PWA, a big-works program in which
sponsors had to pay part of the cost,
and was in constant fighting with
WPA, a fully federal spending
agency pouring out money like wa-
ter.
In his own department and under
PWA, many things worried him, and
he felt they could not be defended
if known. A subsistence homestead
project at Reedsville, W. Va., ‘got
out of hand, the places costing sev-
eral times what they should have.
He frankly lays this ‘to interference
by Mrs. Roosevelt. A hotel costing
$120,000 in the Virgin Islands which
he later visited was found to have
parquet in the rooms, and no hot
water supply. He was able finally
to soft pedal the Passamaquoddy
power project and the Florida ship
canal, both of which incited much
opposition and which he personally
did not favor. By direct orders of
the President, which he did not
dare to admit at the time, he put
pressure on Mayor LaGuardia of
New York to fire Robert Moses,
whom he did not even know per-
sonally, but had been described as
an unpleasant person who was tre-
mendously efficient.
Many times he felt dissatisfied
with his relations with the Presi-
dent, and once resigned in writing.
Rather early he found that he could
not depend upon what had been
promised him, and after a while he
so records, saying that he had for a
long time hated to admit it to him-
self. He records his likes and dis-
likes with amazing frankness, at one
time or another mentioning almost
all the figures in public life. He felt
that the papers were against the
administration and himself and cul-
tivated many of the leading owners
and. reporters. In the 1936 campaign
he led an attack against William
Randolph Hearst which took the
heat off many things: which would
probably have defeated Roosevelt if
known.
An intimate of the President told
Ickes that Roosevelt would never
have been president if it had not
been for his affliction. Previously
he had been a playboy. During his
long illness he began to read deeply
and study public questions, becom-
ing one of the best informed men in
the country.
This is an informative and inter-
etc., always going on so that heesting book.
Cub Scouts Clean
Up Shaver Cemetery
Den Mothers of Pack No. 233 of
Shavertown met on Monday after-
noon with Cub Master, Joseph Pre-
cone and Mrs. Dan Shaver at the
Shaver [Cemetery on Overbrook
Avenue to complete plans to clean
up the cemetery for Decoration
Day and to observe “Clean and
Spruce Up Week.”
Plans for- all cubg and dads to
meet on Saturday, May 11 at 10
am. until 1:00 p.m. were made.
Dads are to bring saws and clip-
pers to cut the dead timber from
©
%
Represents Shrine
Mrs. Arnold Yeust, Shavertown,
will leave Saturday morning from
Avoca Airport to attend the Su-
preme Session of the Order of the
White Shrine of Jerusalem in New
Orleans. Representing Calvary
Shrine 20 of which she is Worthy
High' Priestess, she will spend a
week in New Orleans.
the trees.
rakes.
The pack will hold its monthly
meeting on Monday evening at
7:30 p.m. in St. Paul’s Church.
The cubs are to bring
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
WV
COM
a SEE
= SAVE
BACK MOUNTAIN
/
Main Highway
—
~ LUMBER & COAL CO.
Shavertown
674-1441
Better Leighton Never
by Leighton Scott
METS CATCHING ON
I was in New York Saturday in
time to witness a striking phenom-
enon which is of interest to red-
blooded Americans everywhere.
The sour old city has fallen in
love with the Mets. (The Mets, if
for some reason you don’t know,
is a new baseball team in the Na-
tional League. It is beginning its
second season although some. New
Yorkers don’t count last year as a
season.)
New York's most powerful sta-
tion adopted the team after theyttt
tion (watt-wise), WABC, promptly
adopted the team after they won
two games in a row, and was busy
over weekend bally-hooing the up-
coming game against the Pirates.
The Mets lost a close one there. :
A small forum of pundits tried to
figure just what it was with the
Mets that was taking New York.
Their record to date was neutral at
best, although 100 per cent better
than last year.
Of the two “New York” teams of
yore, the Yankees were (and are)
accepted as a fact of life, and the
Giants relatively’ ignored.
Then one of the pundits men-
tioned Brooklyn Dodgers, and it
was evident he had uttered a truth.
New York missed them after they
went to California.
The Mets, recovering from their
own bumbling, are the town’s new
little bad boy of baseball, some-
times up, sometimes down, but al-
ways interesting.
. The man in the street in Man-
hattan, trudging home from a hard
day’s work, customarily stops at
the corer for a beer, and can
usually drum up a conversation by
asking “How did the 's do
today 7?”
_ With only the Yankees, that be-
came a moot question, and until
this year, it looked as though the
Mets would be just as moot.
MISTAKENLY TAKEN
Last week's speculation on the
locality of Dallas’ new post office
was meant to concern itself with |
that subject solely.
The side reference to Shavertown
post office. was meant only as a
translation by me of am extreme
viewpoint held by some, and to
which, as Issaid, I did not agree.
The article was certainly never
meant as a diatribe against a per-
son, organization, or municipality,
and I was shocked to learn that it
was thought so by a few people.
I had no intention of any refer-
ence to Superintendent of Mails
Richard Griffith, a fine and devoted
public servant, whom I met for the
first time only last weekend.
As most people are aware, post-
office authorities in Shavertown
were not at liberty to take any ac-
tion when the U. S. postoffice de-
partment decided to make Shaver-
town a branch of Wilkes-Barre. The
move was consummated after the
+ cost more.
. . . Safety
BUSINESS MANAGER NEEDED
All this beating about the bush
in the selection of candidates for
school directors ignores the three
most important questions a candi-
date should be compelled to an-
swer, viz:
1. Will he cultivate a tough hide
and demonstrate an ability to say
“No”? And if there is any doubt
of the necessity of an expenditure,
will the candidate always say “No”
until ‘fully convinced that the ex-
penditure is justified, and not in-
dulge in log rolling, “If you do this
for me, I'll do that for you”.
2. Will the candidate insist that
a fully qualified busimess manager,
at an adequate salary, be appointed
to look after financial matters, the
same as any ordinary corporation
would do spending a million and a
quarter dollars a year with obliga-
tions for many millions more? = At
present the whole responsibility
rests with the Associate Superin-
tendent. The Secretary, formerly
an executive officer of the school
board, is simply a figurehead and
bookkeeper,
3. Will the candidate insist that
the present plan of am appointed
hand-picked auditor, even though
he be a C.P.A. be discontinued
forthwith and auditors’ elected re-
sponsible to the people, who will
make an honest effort to uncover
amy extravagances or irregularities,
which a hand-picked auditor will
never do? He cannot bite the
hand that feeds him.
In earlier days a craftsman or
small manufacturer took pride in|
using the best materials and
having work performed with the
best tools by the best workmen,
creating a superior product, which
Since the NEW DEAL
DAYS a converse theory has been
in vogue, “It it costs more it is
better, and the more it costs the
better it is. This is the way our
schools are planned today. An of-
ficial stated publicly that our local
feasibility, some of which was pur-
portedly based on public opinion.
FUMBLED RUMBLE
An
stremgth and skill between several
high-school factions, slated to reach
gang-fight proportions, was badly
attended Friday might.
According to the high-school
grapevines, car-loads from West
Side and Kingston were going to
land in the bowling alley parking
lot, whereupon Dallas area boys
would sit quietly in their own cars
and wait for the invaders to start
something.
The night was COLD and the
moon was yeller, and there was
darned little place to park, because
Friday might’s a big bowling night.
State and local police cruised
quietly through the lot at regular
intervals, So did two or three car-
loads of kids, but they never
stopped.
impromptu exercise of|
__DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Valve . . .
taxes are ‘painfully low”. The air
is full of charges that we are not
spending enough, our average being
so much less than this or that.
It is time to get away from this.
We should spend what we have to,
to maintain good schools. It is not
necessary to worry about keeping
up with the Joneses. We have a
lot of frills already, such as teach-
housewife to drive when
ing a
there are already half a dozen
drivers in ‘the same family, and
others who have no car available to
drive. ;
And above all, the expenditure
should not be controlled by one
man, recorded by his secretary, and
audited by a hand-picked auditor.
D. A. Waters
ABOUT TROLLEY CARS
Dear Myra: 2 :
In reading the Post today I
noticed that Mrs. Newman wanted
to know when the last trolley went
to Harveys Lake. I suppose by this
time a number of people have sent
information but they may not know
that the library has “The Trolley
Car Treasury’ among the memory
books. In ‘that is a picture of the
last Dallas trolley in 1940 which
literally ram over a car on its last
trip. There is nothing in the text
but just. the caption under the pic-
ture. I don’t suppose it is neces-
sary to send the information all
the way across the U.S. when there
must be plenty of people who. re-
member but they might not know
about that picture. z
Best wishes always
Miriam Lathrop
Editor’s Note: Here's your an-
swer, Mrs, Newman, and clear from
Sun City, Arizona. The Library has
a picture. 3
Dallas Senior Chorus
To Present Concert
Dallas Senior High School Chorus
will present its annual spring con-
cert in the high school auditorium
Thursday evening, May 2 at 8
o'clock. The fifth and sixth grade
chorus of Dallas Elementary
schools will also participate.
Several violin selections by a
group of students will be featured.
The group has recently started
stringed instruction under the di-
rection of Lorraine Rowe, College
Misericordia.
Meeting Held
The Back Mountain Police Aux-
iliary, held its monthly meeting at
the Lehman Fire Hall, Thursday,
April 25. Edward Gdosky, district
game protector, showed a film on
wild life. The firemen will hold
their annual dance at the Jackson
Fire Hall, May 17 at 8 p.m. The
auxiliary will assist with Mrs. Mi-
chael Traver, head of the commit-
tee. Music will be furnished by
the Sharps Trio with Red Jones,
caller. It is going to be a modern
farmer dance.
government made a ‘survey’ of
Highest Quality Ice Cream in the Area—
_SPRING —
ICE CREAM
SALE
Tastes Better
Is Better
OPEN DAILY
“Freezer Fresh”
Twin Kiss Friday, Saturday,
Soft ICE CREAM and, Sunday
* Made With Real Pineapple
Ice Cream Mix. and
Strawberry
SUNDAE
25¢
* Pop Corn — Orange, Birch and
Root Drinks
® Chocolate
® Vanilla
® Banana
® Pineapple
® Raspberry
® Orange-Pineapple
. 0
@® Vanilla and Chocolate
® Chocolate Mint
@® Vanilla and Strawberry
® White House
® Butterscotch
® Carmel Fudge
@® Pistachio
® Coffee
SHERBETS
@® Lime
COMBINATIONS
® Vanilla and Raspberry
® Vanilla and Orange Sherbet
GALLON
MAY 2-12
Ls
®
Chocolate-Chip
Maple Walnut
Strawberry
Butter Pecan
French Vanilla
Vanilla Fudge
@® Butterscotch Revel
@
®
®
®
®
*
® Red Raspberry
Sandwiches and Platters Served Daily
SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY
HADDOCK PLATTER with french fries, cole slaw, bread and butter. . . .65¢
974 Wyoming Ave
FORTY FORT ICE CREAM CO.
Locally Owned and Operated
308 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort
| MAIN mIGHWAY, DALLAS |
Kingston
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