[SR Lal r mre oS TE ty T a hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. SECTION A —PAGE 2 HE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “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 Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less ‘than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions; $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 unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. 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 to be placed on mailing list. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local 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. Transient rates 80. Political advertising $.85, $1.10, $1.25 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 85c per column inch. ; 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. o%} 'o 8, Member Audit Bureau of Circulations = ° Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association: < dy a Member National Editorial Association Surat’ Editorially Speaking: Good Sportsmanship! Boys used to fight with their fists, matching their strength with that of other boys. Learning how to fight was termed the manly art of self-defense, and fathers took pride in the prowess of their sons, while mothers secretly wrung their hands or openly advised junior that “it wasn’t nice to fight, don’t you want to be a little gentleman” 2 Do fathers these days take pride in their sons when the sons gang up on one boy and beat him to insensi- bility? Is it considered good sportsmanship for two boys to hold another while a third boy kicks him in the stomach and rains vicious blows on his face and head? What has become of the old fashioned standards that saw a boy matched with another boy of equal weight and ability, while the circle of onlookers kept their hands off, while yelling for their favorite? . The boys who do the beating up shauld really have switch-blade knives, in order to live up to the standards of conduct set forth on television shows. It would be so much simpler to just stab a boy in the stomach than to go to the trouble of holding him and kicking him until he is unconscious. What on earth has happened to good sportsmanship? There was a lot to be said for a good pummelling, when two boys who had spoiling for a fight, mixed it in the vacant lot after school. usually cemented a firm friendship. The fight cleared the air, and A young boy brutally beaten in a lavatory by three or four other boys cannot in all conscience entertain chari- table feelings toward his assailants. Gang warfare leads to more gang warfare, not to friendship and a respect for the other fellow’s muscles. It also leads to juvenile court, with family ranged against family, and nobody the winner. What, No Billboards? It’s a beautiful stretch of road, as route 29 winds -steeply down toward West Nanticoke, curve on curve, through a gorge where mountainous slopes rise higher and higher against the sky. But there is something missing, something which no educated motorist can do without. + Where are those highway billboards, those signs ad- vertising septic tanks and convenient diaper service and the Peek-a-Boo outdoor movie, and Honeymoon Hill Tavern? Those billboards should be overlapping each other like shingles on a roof, obliterating the towering rocks and standing with their feet in the creek. Something to make the motorist feel at home, not out in the wilds. And the new spring greenery, why isn’t it browned with chemicals along the right of way under the power lines? ~ What is anybody thinking of, permitting a beautiful piece of scenery to go undefiled? ? Where is the garbage and the beer cans? But relief is in sight. Just wait until route 309 is pretty ‘much tied up with the construction job due to start any minute now. Traffic will perforce spray out into smaller roads, and route 29 will no longer be neglected. Outdoor adver- tising men will see the light, and the billboards will follow, the advance guard of civilization. Mother Mothers are the queerest things! "Member when John went away, All but Mother cried and cried When they said goodbye that day. She just talked, and seemed to be Not the slightest bit upset— Was the only one who smiled! Others’ eyes were streaming wet. But when John came back again On a furlough, safe and sound, y With a medal for his deed, . And without a single wound, While the rest of us harrahed, Laughed and joked and danced about, Mother kissed him, then she cried— Cried amd cried like all git out! | time, Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott UPS AND DOWNS The new bank Time 'n Temp clock sure got a workout its first week in Dallas. Temperatures ran anywhere from freezing to uncomfortably warm, in what was surely the wack- iest beginning of May in many a year. FOR THE OPEN ROAD Fred Lamoreaux had a time try- ing to establish the new forty-mile- an-hour signs as part of Overbrook Avenue’s way of life. Everybody wanted the signs in front of somebody else’s yard. The homeowner objected that a sign was on his land. When it was measured, he found out his mail-box was in the road right-of-way. Another threatened to remove the sign after a week. And yet nobody wants cars to be allowed to do fifty in front of his house. TERROR IN THE STREETS Of course I had a swell time at the Pancake Festival, but couldn’t do the gastronomic opportunities justice, for a couple of reasons. One problem was a cold, which stifled my famous appetite, amd the other was fear of bands of brigands reported roaming the Back Moun- tain. Fortunately I was missed by this reign of terror, but I understand it consisted of teenage hoodlums using gang methods. We all know what gang methods are. I don’t know why the wires rang with news of martial law in the south, and completely ignored the deplorable situation here. You'd think it was just any other day in Dallas. Responsible parents and teachers I ran into at the school Saturday were pleased with the way the press played it all down, because other- wise youngsters would be encour- aged to seek notoriety. LAKE BLOOMING AGAIN Was glad to see things picking up at the Lake again this weekend, which lent itself nicely to encour- aging business. { Rides are turnimg once again at Hanson's, and hot dog and ice cream stands at Sunset, Warden Place, and Laketon were dividing their time between fishermen and Sunday drivers. There might be reason to fear a slow transient trade this summer, once they get to tearing up Memorial Highway. Even if they maintain traffic over two out of three lanes, those drivers who sweated it out in past summers bumper to bumper may; cry ‘Pnough” to apparitions of ‘dust and flag-men, and stay home. TAMMY LINCOLN Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lincoln, RD 5, Shavertown, announce the birth of a daughter, Tammy, bom April 28 in Nesbitt Hospital. The couple have another daugh- ter, Kim, aged two. : THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1963 ER ER NNR S NINE RRR NES Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters In the horse and buggy days when all transportation was slow and difficult, the local distances frequently traveled had to be short. This accounts for the villages scat- tered around the countryside every few miles. The village was the lo- cation of sawmills and gristmills, blacksmith shops, general stores, postoffice, churches, hotels, frater- nal orders, some schools, doctors, wagon shops, dressmakers, milli- ners, carpenters, - painters, handy- men, shoemakers, and sometimes small industries. The small villages were more important then than to- day. ‘One such village is Lehman, then frequently called Lehman Center. 2 In wilderness days this was part ! of the Comnecticut Township of Bed- ford. Tt was later, for a few years, attached to the Pennsylvania Town- ship of Plymouth, then made part of the new Township of Dallas in 1817. In 1829 it became Lehman Township. In its prime it had sev- eral blacksmith shops, a hotel, two large general stores, one run for generations by the Major family and another by W. R. Neely, an Odd Fellows Lodge, and several churches and doctors. Pioneer Nehemiah Ide was a Pres- byterian and rode horseback to Kingston to attend church there. Some Ides appear in baptismal ree- ords of the First Presbyterian Church at Wilkes-Barre before 1820. Later Presbyterians formed a church. The Methodist Church was so thriving that it became the cen- ter of a circuit, of which Dallas was one of the preaching points, in 1852. There was a Baptist Church, a cir- cuit ‘there also. My grandfather, Elder George Winters, lived there and preached nearly ten years, leav- ing in 1883. Two of his children were born there in 1876 and 1880, my mother being a small girl at the time. Dr. Joel Jackson Rogers, later of Huntsville, first located in Lehman followed by Doctors named Moody and Frantz. Dr. Horace Greeley Colley. went to Lehman as a young man in the 1870s and practiced there many years, later moved to Wilkes-Barre. He had four sons. Arthur, Albert, Fred, and Robert, some born in Lehman, who all be- came pharmacists. Albert, born in Lehman in 1877, where he was commonly called Bert, is currently employed in Kygehn’s Drug Store. His brother, Robert, retired, lives in Wilkes-Barre. The others are dead. Dr. E. W. Wilkinson practiced in the house adjoining that of the late Dr. Harry A. Brown many years. He also had a son named Albert. About’ the same time, Dr. W. S. S. Young (1861-1920), of German descent and from. the Pennsylvania Dutch area, came to Lehman, shortly after his graduation from a Philadelphia College. He lived in the small house, now red with white trim, on the right on the Meeker road. His daughter, Ann, absent many years after the death of her mother, Min- nie Miller, first wife of Dr. Young, later returned and married Arthur Major and resided in the same house, until they built the present residence next door. For his second wife, Dr. Young married Carrie Lain, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lain, who lived on the Meek- er road im the house which burned just' a few years ago. In the Lain family were three other daughters who grew up there and all became physicians. Dr. Rach- el Lain and Dr. Jennie Lain Nesbitt located in Vallejo, Calif. Dr. Lizzie Lain moved to Santa Rosa, Calif. Later in life Dr. Young and his wife, Carrie Lain, also moved to Califor- nia. For a short period there was a Doctor Richards in ‘the area, who married a daughter of Charles Learn. To most people, when they think of Lehman, “The Doctor” there was Dr. Harry A. Brown (1877-1957). Unlike all the others, Dr. Brown was a descendant of a pioneer family, living continuously in the township for four generations. The pioneers were Amos Brown (1775-1847) and wife, Levinna (1785-1870). Their son, Amos, Jr. and wife, Eleanor Baldwin, of a pioneer family, were parents of Timothy Browm (1846- 1915), who married Mary Jane Ruggles (1844-1937), daughter of Josiah Ruggles, of another pioneer family. Dr. Harry A. Brown, son of Timothy and Mary Ruggles Brown, grew up in Lehman. He attended Bloomsburg State Normal School, taught at Limskill School, later at- tended University of Vermont, and was graduated from Medico-Chiru- gical College at Philadelphia in 1903. He served his internship at Wilkes- Barre (General) Hospital and prac- ticed at Lehman well over half a century. He begam in the horse and buggy days but was one of the early users of an automobile in the Leh- man area. Although he survived all the nearby “old fashioned country doctors”, he was always considered well up to modern practices in his vrofession and was on the staff of Nesbitt Memorial Hospital for many years. His widow, the former Kath- leen Major, still lives where he practiced at Lehman. Mrs. Arthur Major recalls many incidents in the life of a small town or country doctor in the horse and buggy days. There being no tele- phones in the rural area, people would come to the house in the mid- dle of the night. get up and dress seasonably, take a kerosene lantern and hitch up a horse to a sulky or buggy, hang the lamtern under the wagon to give a | little light on the road, and start out. He would be’ gone all night, sometimes all day and all the sec- ond night, with his family mean- while having no informatiom about him. Then upon his return he would bring in butter, eggs, etc, which had been given him in payment. The horse and buggy doctors lived a rugged life, were very neces- sary and helpful in the community, and were respected accordingly. Zz . « . Safety TRAFFIC CIRCLE NEEDED Dear Editor: Tell the lady who wrote in about the danger of the intersection of the Lake Highway with Route 118, that we are with her 100 percent. .| There should be a circle there, and there’s plenty of ground to do it now. Mrs. W. Russell Ide Note; It’s been a dangerous spot ever simce the new Lehman road went through a number of years ago. Signs grow larger and more numerous all the time, but motor- ists simply cannot visualize a dead- end. Still, there hasnt been any- body over the bamk for quite some It’s a problem getting onto the highway from Route 118 on a Valve . . . busy Sunday afternoon, and just as much of a problem making a left turn from the highway toward Leh- man under the same traffic condi- tions. The ‘turnoff is practically in- visible at night. It was poorly engineered in the first place, an abrupt turn when the intersection could have been laid out in a long curve. But in the last analysis, it is the driver who is to blame. If he can’t read and obey signs, he has no business on the road, and blaming it on the engineers is a very poor alibi. A traffic circle would probably involve an underpass, which is an expen- sive proposition, but there is plenty of elevation to permit it. A blinker light might help. learn to love you. not wrong with my feet. “Keep me well shod. off my tail. cool water often. the cold. life in your service. THE HORSE'S PRAYER “To Thee, My Master, I offer my prayer, feed me, water and 8 care for me, and when the day's work is dome, provide me with shelter, a clean, dry bed and a stall wide enough for me to lie down im comfort. “Always be kind to me. Talk to me. “Your voice often means as much to me as the reins. “Pet me, sometimes, that I may serve you the more gladly and “Do mot jerk the reins, and do not whip me when going uphill. “Never strike, beat or kick me when I do not understand what you want, but give me a chance to understand you. “Watch me, and if I fail to do your bidding, see if something is “Do mot check me so that I cannot have the free use of my head. “Examine my teeth when I do not eat; I may have an ulcerated tooth, and that, you know, is very painful. “Do mot tie my head in an unnatural position, or take away my best defense against flies and mosquitoes by cutting “I cannot tell you in words when I'm thirsty so give me clean “I cammot tell you in words when I am sick, so watch me, that by signs you may know my condition. “Give me all possible shelter from the hot sum, and put a blanket on me, not when I'm working but standing in “I try to carry you and your burdens without a mwrmur, and wait patiently for you long hours of the day or might. “Remember that I must be ready at any moment to lose my “Finally, O My Master, when my useful strength is gome, do mot turn me out to starve or freeze, or sell me to some cruel owner, to be slowly tortured and starved to death; but do thou, My Master take my life in the kindest way, and your God will reward you here and hereafter. “You will not consider me irreverent if I ask this in the Name of Him who was born in a Stable.” —Amen. (Author Unknown) Sent in by Herman Thomas | Mrs. Ben Banks Heads Mercy Auxiliary Mrs, Ben C. Banks will head Mercy Hospital Auxiliary, Back Mountain Branch during ‘the coming year. Other officers installed at the Spring Luncheon Tuesday at Irem Temple Country Club were Mrs. Don. ald McCrea, vice president; Mrs. George Arzente Jr., secretary; Mrs. Harry Gallagher, treasurer. Mrs. Roger McShea Jr. introduced the incoming president, Mrs. Banks. Mrs. McShea was presented the past president’s pin and received a rising vote of thamks for an excellent job. Plans for the summer card party to be held at O’Connell’s Twin Lakes June 25 were discussed and a special meeting scheduled for June 4 to complete details. Mrs. Banks was chosen delegate to the Hospital Auxiliaries Work- shop at Penn State University June i7 . 20. Announcement of ‘the Wilkes- Barre Auxiliary Spring Luncheon and Card Party June 12 at Fox Hill Country Club was made by Mrs. McShea. The Dallas Post Does Full Color OFFSET PRINTING SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST The doctor would ' Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago With only $40.00 in the general fund, a $115.00 insurance due and tires on the fire truck in bad condi- tion, Shavertown Fire Company was seriously considering a half mill assessment. Rain and cold slowed crop growth causing much concern among farm- ers. A new water tank on Hillcrest Street, Shavertown, installed by H. F. Goeringer W a ter Company, ‘was expectéd to greatly improve the water supply in this area. Additional white lines were paint- ed on the county highway from Trucksville to Dallas to improve safety measures. George Traver, Beaumont, pur- chased a new Chevrolet, Ed Mac- Dougall, a new Ford coach and Bob MacDougall, a Chevrolet coupe. Potatoes sold at 10 pounds for 29 cents, butter, 2 pounds for 47 cents and picnic hams at 8% cents a pound. : Died: Mrs. Nettie Perrego, 75, Laketom; Mary Ferguson Delay, 90, Berwick; Bobby (Weaver, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Weaver, Center- moreland; Mrs. Amanda McCarthy. It Happened 20 Years Ago Mrs. Martha Swelgin, two star mother, Jackson Twp. suffered a fatal heart attack while viewing movie, “Stand By For Action,” at Nanticoke, Gasoline shortage was plaguing farmers in the operation of their tractors. Scores of citizens were assisting in the Scrap Salvage Drive in Dallas Township. : Melvin Adler, US Marine Corps, veteran of Coral Sea and Guadeca- nal, after 35,000 miles of world travel while in the service, still pre- ferred the Back Mountain as the place to make his home. Local airplane spotters received their first instruction at Dallas Bor- ough High School. Servicemen heard from: Ken Da- vis, Earl Williams, Lewis Button, ! Frank Morgan, Lou Kelly, Joseph i Polachek, Hermam Brislin, Harold , Casterline, Ralph Antrim, Fred Wil- ‘cox, Larry Drabick, James Harris, Glenn Kocher, Stewart Yorks, Len Hooper, Peter Skopic, Lester Fiske, Bill Oberst, G. A. Loveland. Married: Ruth Crispell, Noxen, to Carl Newberry, Beaumont; Frances Darnell, Atlanta, Ga., to Samuel Brace, Huntsville. : Anniversaries: Mr. and Mrs. Merle Shaver, Dallas, celebrated their 25th wedding date. Died: Mrs. Mae Roberts, Harvey's Lake; Eugene Montross, Beaumont; Mrs. Esther Purhen, Dallas. It Happened [0 Years Ago Harry Steltz, 4, Hunlock’s Creek, was badly injured when attacked by the family dog. Dallas Township began construc- tion of the short cut road between Fernbrook and 'Shavertown. Commonwealth Telephone Com- pany’s rate increase roused protest among local users. Bi-County League mumbered one hundred members. Mrs. Malcohm Nelson, Harvey's Lake, was proud of her huge rain- bow trout catch. Marriages: Jeanne Margaret Scott, Kingston, to Walter Schultz, Fernbrook; Joan Shiner, Loyalville, to Lt. William Smilinick, Denver, Colo. Deaths: E. R. Dymond, 41, Car- verton; Fred Ide, 81, Nescopeck. RETIRED TEACHERS LUNCHEON JUNE 1 Retired teachers of Luzerne County will stage a luncheon in the Adams Room at Hotel Sterling Saturday, June 1, at 1 p.m. Special guest speak- er will be the Hon. ‘Bernard O'Brian, State Representative from the leg- islative district. Catalogues - Brochures Try Post Offset A TICKET DESIGNED . . . With The PEOPLE In MIND — SUPERVISOR 19 B—ALAN MAJOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE 22 A—HAROLD MAJOR Lehman Township Republican 7 ‘Ticket SCHOOL DIRECTOR "(Vote 2) |20 A—BARBARA VIVIAN |20 B—DEAN SHAVER AUDITOR 22 B—BARBARA SIMMS The LEHMAN TOWNSHIP Sincerely Solicits Your VOTES for the Above Candidates. REPUBLICAN COMMITTEE From-— Pillar To Post... . By Hix So much free advice is handed out these days that it is diffi- cult to know what to believe and what to dismiss as some manu- facturer’s pitch for customers. ® What with the screaming about pain-killers for minor com- plaints, each product outbidding the other, and all products tending to put the corner drugstore on easy street as the gullible public invests in first one and then the other, returning inevitably to aspirin, pelief is just a tablet away. There is one thing, however, that most doctors agree on, and that is, if your back aches, your mattress is probably sagging and you'd better do something about it. A bed-board doesn’t get fea- tured on Television normally, because once you buy a bed-board, that’s it, and there is no constant reordering to keep a store in business. It seemed a sound idea to buy a bed-board the other day, after limping out of bed in the morning. Pills are all very well, but if your mattress sags, your back aches, no matter how much aspirin you take aboard. Start with a solid foundation. The first cost is the last. Business of ordering a bed-board. One local store offered to order a bed-board. Another said, what you mean is a bed slat, isn’t it, and we can cut slats to length at so much a running foot. : A town store said it had bed-boards, and a delivery on Mon- day. It looked as if a table leaf inserted between mattress and box springs would hold the fort until Monday, just a short weekend away. Came Monday, with the happy thought of a bed-board by night. Just leave it on the front porch, I had instructed, in giving directions to find the house. The name's on the mailbox, and the house is behind the picket fence, the only picket fence on Pioneer Avenue, Dallas. No bed-board on Monday, no bed-board on Tuesday, no bed- board on Wednesday. The table leaf seemed to be growing steadily narrower. : . ‘ Seems that Pioneer Avenue in Shavertown bristles with picket fences, and the truck driver had become discouraged. Eventually the bed-board appeared on the front porch. Getting the thing properly located presented difficulties. Ever try lifting a mattress and shoving a bed-board beneath it? No space to stand at the side and jockey the thing into place. Well try it at the end. That mattress. It weighs a solid ton. It didn’t weigh that much: before the back-ache developed. Just half a ton. Lift it up at the end and start sliding the bedboard, beneath. It can’t be done, not without something as a prop. And your head _DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA won't do. Try a suitcase. Lift up the foot of the mattress and insert the suitcase. Push. There goes the suitcase, propelled by the bedboard, like clock- work. Now try getting the suitcase out at the head of the bed. Business of lifting up the mattress again and delivering the suitcase. And now, where's that heating pad? On account of by this time no bed-board is going to reconstruct that back, and heroic measures are now necessary. And bring on the aspirin, four tablets worth. ... Marine Charting The Course BY BILL BARBOUR Editor Marine Products Magazine What shall my new boat be, wood, aluminum, or fiber glass? In recent years this has become the most popular of all questions asked the so-called experts. Since no self-re- specting expert ever passes up a chance to hold himself out as an authority, every question gets an answer. Usually, in fact, the wise expert comes up with at least six different answers. This permits the asker to pick his own answer, it thoroughly confuses the issue, and it lets the expert off the hook rather neatly. This expert, so-called and otherwise, is no exception. There really isn’t an answer to the wood vs. aluminum vs. glass quarrel. The choice can depend on many things: water and climate con- ditions; docking, handling, and stor- age facilities; economics; how and for what the owner intends to use the boat; and personal taste. Most of all, the boat buyer should ask him- self what he wants in a boat, and what he expects out of a boat. Notice, safety and reliability were not mentioned. Obviously, these should be any boat buyer’s first two thoughts. But they have little Notes... to do with hull material. There are extremely safe and reliable boats afloat today made of all three hull ‘materials.* Unfortunately, the: oppo- site also is true. } Q. How strong is a glass boat? A. Fiber glass reinforced plastic is itself, pound for pound, stronger than steel. Strength of the boat de- pends on the job the builder does. Q. Is fiber glass durable? A. Fiber glass cannot rust, rot, or corrode. After 11 years of service, a group of 40-foot Coast Guard glassboats | showed no deterioration. One boat was in use 7600 hours, equal to about 35 years of normal pleasure boat operation. Q. Will a glass hull stay water- tight? A. Most glass hulls are mold- ed in one piece with no seams to open, no fasteners to work loose. Q. Is fiber glass really mainten- ance free? A. Frankly, there is no such thing as a no-maintenance boat, but glass comes closest. A coat of wax and an occasional wash-down help. Though you may want to paint after a few years to freshen-up the appearance, or use a bottom paint to discourage barnacles and algae, you never need paint a glass boat to protect against deterioration. Q. If I do paint, will I need a special type? A. No, any good mar- ine paint will do. MOTHER'S DAY MAY 12, 1963 TOMATO #* * CELERY FRUIT SALAD WITH SNOWFLAKE POTATOES : BUTTERED FORD HOOK LIMAS %* ® ROLL AND BUTTER * # 53. FRESH SHRIMP COCKTAIL BEEF CONSOMME WITH LEMON SLICE RADISHES ROAST YOUNG TURKEY AND DRESSING W /CRANBERRY. SAUCE VIRGINIA BAKED HAM — RAISIN SAUCE ROAST PRIME RIBS OF BEEF AU JUS JUMBO STUFFED SHRIMP — TARTAR SAUCE LOBSTER ALA NEWBURG WITH TOAST POINTS ~ Choice of Two : BUTTERED FRESH CUT CORN . ! - APPLE, BLUEBERRY, OR CHERRY PIE COCONUT CREAM PIE ICE CREAM OR SHERBET WE WILL HAVE A SPECIAL CHILDREN’S MENU. 00 FRUIT CUP * * OLIVES WHIPPED CREAM DRESSING FRENCH FRIED POTATOES CREAMED PEARL ONIONS BEVERAGE * * TErrace PRINCE HOTEL TUNKHANNOCK, PA. 6-6131
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers