The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 06, 1963, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
<ED
\
© Lo
cent real estate transfer tax plagu-
i
~ Kingston Township solicitor,
posed the homeowners’ lawyer file
~ suit to get a court decision.
~ whereby similar appropriation of
ed a number of homesites in Carver-
ton for flooding for an artificial
~ State Park.
in agreeing to a statement of facts
to the court.
~ journed meeting of Board of Su-
| pervisors Tuesday, May 31, Attor-
ney Jenkins quoted a recent Su-
could not advise the board to re-
frain from collection of the tax
§ ance.
SECTION A — PAGE 2
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies
aA
+ ©
Publishers Association
Cua’
Associates, Inc.
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879.
year; $2.50 six months.
six months, Out-of-State subscri
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c.
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Subcription rates: $4.00 a
ptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
Editorially
Showing The World
This is the kind of news
front page in the newspaper
“John Doe, 17, wag fatally injured Tuesday night in
a crash on highway 309. His companion, Mary Roe, is
in eritical condition at the hospital, suffering from a frac-
ture of the skull which will leave her totally blind if she
recovers. Her face was badly lacerated.”
~ The reason that girl drivers have fewer accidents
than boys, is that girls care a
have to prove a thing, to themselves or anybody else.
A boy has to show the
car up ahead before it reaches the crest of the hill.
Nobody wants a boy to be a pantywaist.
wants him to lack self-confidence.
But is it too much to ask of him that he refrain from
committing suicide the night of graduation? :
And that he give some
girl at his side, the girl who,
be disfigured for life?
Speaking:
we do not care to see on the
issue following graduation:
bout their faces. They don’t
world that he can beat that
Nobody
small thought to the young
as a helpless passenger, may
Carverton Folk
Seek Tax Action
To find a solution to the one per
ing Carverton homeowners affected
state appropriation of their
homes, Attorney Mitchell Jenkins,
pro-
Speaking to representatives of
those protesting the tax at an ad-
preme Court case from Pittsburgh
land by a government corporation
was deemed a conveyance—i. e. tax-
able,
Department of Forests and Wat-
ers has condemned and appropriat-
lake in proposed Frances Slocum
Jenkins further stated that he
mark whatever tax was already
collected so that it would be avail-
able should the decision of the court
dictate a refund.
Discussion was held on the build-
ing additions completed recently at
Meadowcrest without application of
Housing Authority for permits, re-
quired of all other taxpayers.
Attorney Jenkins reported a
hearing scheduled on the Engler
case. Citizens of Lohman Street
urged repair of their road, disclos-
ing that road was badly washed out
due to lack of drains, and residents
were unable to enter their garagse.
Mr. Hauck promised aid for their
dilemma and disclosed that the road
program should be assessed by next
meeting.
Bids for a mew cruised for police
department was ordered advertised
with bids to be opened June 26.
Request for relocation of traffic
lights by highway contractor was
held in abeyance. Option on Hol-
comb property was authorized at
cost of $1.
Two new roads meeting specifica-
tions in Midway Manor were taken
over by the township. Whitesell
Brothers, development contractors,
since such was a township ordin-
The solicitor informed the
group that he was hired to protect
the board of supervisors lest they
be personally surcharged. He said
he would cooperate to the fullest
He advised the secretary to ear-
Penns Woods Notebook
BY JIM HOPPLE
T's that time of the year again |
when we like to get outdoors and
camp. One thing that we run into
outdoors is snakes most of which |
are harmless, but are killed byl
people because they do not know |
the harmless from the nonharmless
ones. |
Snakes can be fascinating and
interesting to some people but
most people develop a real
| dread and fear of all snakes. Snakes |
| are secretive and they prefer to
move away when you disturb them.
| But like other animals, they may
stand their ground and fight when
During their aétive period they feed
on live animal life, such
rodents
their skin several times a year. You
should ' never
| conservation field I will answer
disturbed. - Snakes have some
special characteristics, one of which
is that they: hibernate in winter.
5 small
and = birds, frogs, toads,
salamanders, insects and worms.
Their teeth are tiny and hooked
back in the mouth to hold food
items. Tangs of poisonous snakes
are hollow, Lower jaws are hinged
to permit swallowing large prey.
The forked tongue is used as a
feeler, not as a stinger,
Some snakes lay eggs, while
others give birth to living young.
Young ones develop rapidly and
must shed their skin to take care
of its growth. Most snakes shed
capture or handle
‘snakes unless you are certain you
have the knowledge to tell the
poisonous omnes from the harmless
ones. And you should not kill
snakes in hopes that you have
killed a poisonous one.
Learn to know the difference, Re-
spe poisonous snakes for their
venomous bite; and respect harm-
less ones as interesting, useful, and
‘beneficial citizens of our woods and
fields. If you spend any time in the
woods you should learn to recognize
them as you would any other kind
of wildlife.
Practically all snakes are useful.
There are three kinds in Pennsyl-
vania that are poisonous. They are
the Northern Copperhead, Eastern
Massasauga, and the Eastern Tim-
ber Rattlesnake. If you have any
‘questions on wildlife or some other
it here in the Dallas Post. Just
drop a postecard with your name
and address along with your ques-
tion to Penns Woods Notebook, Box
408, Dallas, Pa.
PRINTING
Tey The Post
were commended for: the excellent
job done in the new section.
To Receive Award
Joseph W. Fry, of 113 Davis
Street, Trucksville, who is em-
ployed as a salesman at the Kraft
Foods Philadelphia Sales Office, will
be honored for 10 years of service
with the company on June 8.
Receives Law Degree
JAMES A. MARTIN II
James Alexander Martin III, Dal-
las, Texas, wassawarded the degree
of Bachelor of Laws, Monday eve-
ning May 27, at the 48th Annual
Convocation of Southern Methodist
Uiversity, Texas.
Dr. Willis M. Tate, President of
the University, delivered the com-
mencement address to the graduat-
ing class of nearly 1250 members.
Mr. Martin, son of Professor and
Mrs. James A. Martin, Lehigh
Street, Shavertown, is a graduate
of Kingston Township High School
and Pennsylvania State University,
where he was enrolled under the
US Navy ROTC program. He is a
member of Chi Phi Fraternity.
Upon receiving his Bachelor of
Arts degree, Mr. Martin served
three years on a destroyer during
World War II in the Mediter-
ranean, where he was commis-
sioned a senior lieutenant.
It. Martin is employed by the
U.S. Department of Health and
Welfare and is in charge of govern-
ment real estate in the states of
Arizona, Texas, Louisiana, New
Mexico and Oklahoma, . both pur-
chasing and disposing of the na-
tion’s properties.
He resides with his wife, the
former Marilyn Marshall, Blairs-
ville, Pa., and two children, James
Martin, 1V, four, and Lynne Ellen,
aged one and a half years, at 3920
Amherst Avenue, Dallas, Texas.
Humanity is fickle—friends may
toast you today and roast you tomor-
row.
~The Southside-Sentinel
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Happened
30 Years Ago
A stone chalet was being built at
the Big Bend in Luzerne, construc-
tion proceeding rapidly on: the
$20,000 structure built by Joe
Blazes.
CCC Corps, over 200 men, en-
camped at Forkston on a reforesta-
tion project.
Dallas High School was graduat-
ing 16 seniors.
Receiving degrees at State College
were Paul H. Bertram and Charles
F. Hess.
Heavy storm with high winds
blew in a plate glass window at the
Witch-Kitch Inn.
Vesuvius was in eruption.
Concrete was being poured at
Boulder Dam.
Indiana was the tenth State to
vote against, prohibition.
Married: Fay Nulton and John J.
Smith, both of Beaumont.
Dallas Borough slashed 3 mills
from the taxes.
Lifted from the Mountain Echo,
Shickshinny, a gruesome story
about an infant being attacked by
large rats.
Leonard O'Kane’s friends were
circulating a petition to make him
constable.
Butter, 2 pounds, 49 cents. Water-
melons, 49 cents. Coffee, 17 cents
pound.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Red Cross opened its first surgical
dressing station for the area at Irem
Country Club.
Lake Township graduated sixteen
seniors.
Picnics for students were can-
celled because of shortage of gaso-
line.
Russell Krause, 17, formerly of
Dallas, was suffocated under tons of
sand when a loading hopper on a
construction job in Corning, N. Y.,
discharged its cargo.
Heard from in the Outpost: Jiggs
Elston, Cuba; Clarence LaBar, Jef-
ferson Barracks; James Elston,
North Africa; Glenwood Herring,
North Africa; John Tribler, San An-
tonio; Stan Hoyt, Seattle APO; Al-
bert Mekeel, Camp Gordon; Carl
Carey, North Carolina; Olin E, Web-
er and Tom Templin, somewhere in
Africa;: Robert Price, South Caro-
lina; Wilson Garinger, Maxwell
Field; Robert Traver, Bayonne, N. J.;
Elwood Ide, Jacksonville; Stephen
Watlock, Corpus Christi; G. L. Kest-
ler, New York APO; Loren E. Mec-
Carty, Jacksonville; Burton King,
England.
Died: Mrs. Margaret Allen, form-
erly of Noxen; Mrs. Mary Levitt,
Beaumont; Nicholas Tredennick, 67,
Dallas.
Thomas E. Hontz re-opened the
store in Huntsville formerly operat-
ed by Gerald Frantz.
Ross Township dedicated its Hon-
or Roll honoring 65 boys in the
service.
Box at the top of page one lists:
Killed in action, Richard Welling-
ton Cease, killed January 29, 1942;
Died in the Service: George Utrick,
May 16, 1942, and Howard Cos-
grove, July 3, 1942. Missing in Ac~
tion: Keats Poad, Walter Cease Wil-
son, Clarence Morgan, Donald Free-
man, Harold Thomas Kepner, John
E. Fritz, John P. Gleason.
It Happened
[0 Years Ago
The front page was dedicated to
pictures of graduates from four high
schools: . Westmoreland, Dalla s-
Franklin, Lake-Noxen, and Lehman-
Jackson.
Dallas Post Office was made a
first class post office, with receipts
exceeding $40,000, due to increased
business with Commonwealth Tele-
phone Company and Bloomsburg
Mills. g
Certain residents with properties
on Church Street and Machell Ave-
nue were ordered to install side-
walks.
Dallas Honor Roll, badly damaged
by frost, was restored with new
Carara marble,
Civil = Defense kicked in with
$6,801 toward a new Dallas Borough
pumper.
Robert Dolbear headed Luzerne
County PSEA. George Taylor, su-
pervising principal of Lake-Noxen,
was named delegate to National
Educators Association in Miami.
Rain caused postponement of
Memorial Day parade in Sweet Val-
ley.
Shavertown looked forward to
drilling of a deep well to boost its
water supply.
Dr. Robert M. Bodycomb was
elected president of Dallas-Borough-
Kingston Township school board.
Ben Jenkins phoned birthday
greetings from Japan to his sister,
Dianne, in Dallas. >
Barbara Balut was crowned West-
moreland May Queen,
Rent Control offices closed per-
manently.
Died: Wesley Schenck, 78, Noxen.
Mrs. Ann Vavrick, Demunds, had
a letter from her son, John, held
prisoner in Korea.
Everything comes faster to the
person who hustles as he waits.
Fiat 2 —The Plaindealer
Urbanna, Virginia
y
| Queen Aliquippa. On this trip Wash-
THE DALLAS POST, TH
SA
SE RR TH
URSDAY, JUNE 6, 1963
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer
President Kennedy stirred up a
lot of interest when he dug up an
old order of Theodore Roosevelt
regarding 50 mile hikes. If he ever
heard of Roosevelt's order that
every army officer should ride
horseback 90 miles in three days,
he discreetly said nothing about it.
There are too many officers today
and few riding horses. Ninety miles
in three days would have been noth-
ing in colonial times.
George Washington was an out-
standing horseman and rode thou-
sands of miles. He wrote that his
habitual gait was five miles an hour
and estimated distances accordingly,
his estimates being pretty close to
distances between the same points
as measured today. He rode from
Mt. Vernon to Boston, and traveled, |
sometimes by foot, carriages, boats,
etc, part time, as far south as
Savannah, Ga., north to Kittery,
Me., and inland almost to Lake
Oneida, N, Y., Lake Erie, and the
Kanawha River, now W. Va. One
time he rode 560 miles in 16’ days,
sometimes averaged over 35 miles a
day for over a week. Frequently he
made maps, and always kept ex- |
pense accounts and diaries. On hard
trips he took several horses and on
one trip he recorded that one horse
had been killed outright and four
others practically done up. Al-
though he was an aristocrat, he put
in his teenage years traveling and
working as a surveyor, for which he
received good pay, in good weather
only, equal to $7.16 to $21.50 per
day, but for it he had to live the
hard life of the frontier. He did a
lot of horseback riding in Pennsyl-
vania.
It was his frontier experience
that caused Gov. Dinwiddie to select
him to bear a message to the French
commandant in the Ohio Valley re-
questing the French to get out. This
was an elaborate expedition with
Christopher Gist, a pioneer as guide,
an interpreter, two white servants,
two Indian traders, and several
horses loaded with baggage and
supplies. ‘At the moment a white
man could go safely anywhere, but
the Indians were angry at the
French. He met Chiefs Shingiss, Half
King, Jeskake, White Thunder, and
Guyasuta (spelling of all names
varies), the latter accompanying
them as a hunter to provide food.
The first French officer he met in-
vited him to supper but refused to
accept the message, which required
a long journey to the senior officer
at Fort LeBoeuf. He received a re-
ply and returned in bad weather,’
partly with only Gist on foot, call-
ing enroute at the town of Indian
ington covered the country from
Cumberland, Md., to the Forks of
the Ohio and a little beyond, then
nearly up to Lake Erie and return.
Later as a lieutenant colonel he
— D. Al Waters
French but had to surrender, with
honors of war, at Ft. Necessity. As
every schoolboy knows, he accom-
panied Gen. Braddock into Pennsyl-
vania on that disastrous campaign.
But not as well known, he was also
in command of a Virginia regiment
when Gen. Forbes occupied Ft.
Duquesné on Christmas day, 1758.
In between, while in command of
sone mountain® forts, he got into a
dispute with an unassigned British
captain, who claimed any Kings
commission outranked anything in
the colonial forces. Washington
took off for Boston, on horseback,
passing Philadelphia in February,
1756 to see Gen. Shirley, who decid-
ed in his favor. On this trip he also
met John Adams and others, who
were good friends and useful to him
later in life,
In 1770 he returned to western
Pennsylvania taking up land for
himself and other veterans, at
which time he bought the land on
which Ft. Necessity had stood. The
Indians he had met on his first trip
welcomed him warmly. In 1773 he
| passed through Pennsylvania again
to enroll his stepson in college at
| New York. In 1774 he attended the
{ First Continental Congress, and the
next year the Second at Philadel-
phia, from which he again went to
Boston to take command of troops.
During the Revolution he was in
eastern Pennsylvania just prior to
the Battle of Trenton, moved all
around Philadelphia before that
city fell after the Battles of Brandy-
wine and Germantown, wintered at
Valley Forge, then went toward the
Hudson. He made a fast march
south to attack at Yorktown.
After the War, he visited Phil-
adelphia in 1784 for a meeting of
the Society of the Cincinnati and in
1787 as a member of the Constitu-
tional Convention. In between he
made another trip in southwestern
Pennsylvania on land matters.
Being rich in land, but poor in
cash, he borrowed 600 Pounds and.
went across Pennsylvania to become
President in New York. In 1790
the capital was moved to Philadel-
phia and he made his home there
until 1797. During his term he made
a state visit to the southern states
and a trip westward as far as Bed-
ford to put down the Whiskey Re-
bellion, ' also visited Philadelphia
again in 1798. His travels around
Philadelphia during the war and his
later residence there would make a
map like a piece of chicken wire.
In all, Washington did a lot of
horseback riding in our state: up
‘from Virginia and Maryland by at
Jeast six routes; Wilmington via
Philadelphia to Trenton; York, Lan-
caster, Valley Forge, to the Hudson;
Chambersburg, Carlisle, Reading and
Easton; across the state about
where Route 30 is now; and all the
southwestern corner, including the
started a campaign against the
first trip almost up to Lake Erie.
. . . Safety
About The Doll Booth
Dear Editor:
Due to my health and over load
of sewing I must ask for help from
parents, teachers, and high school
boys and girls. My expenses are
greater this year because of my an-
tique dolls and prizes on chance
books I never turn in a bill to the
committee for my booth and don’t
want to start this year.
I have 400 books of tickets I want
sold before the last of June as there
will be other books for sale during
the Auction. If every parent and
high school boy or girl will buy a
dollar book send it to me with name
and address and if they belong to
Key Clubs or bands add this infor-
mation T will see you get your stubs
at the Auction unless you wish to
stop by my home.
Mean while prizes are No. 1 An-
Valve . . .
tique doll, sister to last year’s double
size doll quilt, and bycicle, a de-
response and many thanks to every
one.
Mrs. Arthur Newman
Mrs. Howard Risley
Dallas Post
Dallas, Pa. 3
Dear Editor, ‘ /
On behalf of the Old Ladies Home,
I want to thank you for the public-
November before our annual Dona-
tiom Day.
The Board is very grateful to you
and your staff for your cooperation.
Sincerely,
’ Elizabeth P. Everett
Corresponding Secretary
Larry Pedersen Honored
By National Foundation
Larry Pedersen, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Wall, Noxen, and jun-
ior at Lake-Lehman High School
has been selected as a participant in
the 1963 Clarkson Summer Science
Training Program for high ability
Secondary School students.
Program is sponsored by the Na-
tional Science Foundation and is
Recognition Accorded
Shavertown Athlete
The Frank Hering Award, was
recently given to George Bednar,
senior guard on Notre Dame foot- |
ball team, for the Best Blocking
Guard in spring practice.
The award, presented annually, is
named for the late Frank Hering,
Notre Dame head coach, shortly
aftér the beginning of the century.
Bednar, of Shavertown, won his
first monogram for Notre Dame last
season, when he played as starting
right tackle. His 45 tackles was
held at Clarkson College of Tech-
nology, Pottsdam, N. Y., from June
30 to August 17.
Professor Harry Bingham is Direc-
tor of the Program, which consists
of lectures and labratory science
taught by the college staff.
Larry is one of twenty-five stu-
dents selected for their ability in
Chemistry and Physics.
EERE ERNE RENEE REE
£ Wheeler's Cafe
Lake - Noxen Road
Harveys Lake
EVERY ' FRIDAY an
SATURDAY NIGHT
Lobster Tail Platter
'/2 Spring Chicken
Club Steakette
the highest figure on the squad.
75
ANEEEEE EN EAE EEE REE EY
ANI EO E33 CS E20 TEESE IR,
Graphic Arts Services
INCORP
Offset Negatives
Sereen Prints, Art Work
Phone
VA 5-2978
EEE STEED SIR ED a GR OE eee SER SEE SE SURE ETT CI EE
bd
|]
¥
ORATED
PHOTO-ENGRAVING
and Platemaking
Better Leighton Never
by Leighton Scott
JOIN UP
We are thinking of starting a
Smokers Anonymous chapter for the
Back Mountain.
"But there are problems. For one
thing, we'd publish a bulletin for
members, like the automobile clubs,
but there’d be the problem of keep-
ing it up to date.
Chances are four out of five new
members would disqualify them-
selves before the bulletin came out.
We would have gift memberships,
and award prizes. Only, since the
goals of the club are abstinence and
self-denial, a star member or a life
member would be given the prize of
having to give up all his cigarettes.
'A regular or associate member
would only have to give up one
pack. Everything he or she smoked
beyond that pack (which of course
he or she couldn't do, because of
already giving it up), would be free
and clear.
There would be a handicap, of
course, Camel smokers would only
give up smoking—no prizes. People
who smoked that cotton candy that
comes in green packages would al-
most have to give up living.
Maybe we'll skip the prizes, and
just run the club.
But don’t ask me to be in charge.
I might start again any day now.
I'll just be the secretary. Please mail
me all nominations.
Tip to wives: If your husband
gives up smoking, mail me his name
without delay. He’ll have to stay
with it just to save face.
[SEEN AND HEARD!
Seen and Heard around the Back
Mountain:
‘Who's that girl buzzing the area
on a turquoise motor scooter?
Boys jumping like pigeons on
bread-crumbs for the ejected shells
from firing squad rifles at Woodlawn
Cemetery on Memorial Day.
Jackson police chief Bob Cooper
very pleased at the cooperation be-
tween his force and Lehman in the
rounding up of two juvenile New
York car thieves recently.
Jack Berti talking about the meat
truck that got mired almost on its
side below the Space farm last
week: “Bill told me there was an
Armour truck upset, and I ran up
here to pick up some of the money.”
Admiration from some other fire
companies at the parade Thursday
for the work, pluck, and appearance
of Harry S. Smith Company, Kunkle.
Good year for catfish at Harveys
Lake, it is said.
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From—
Pillar To Post as
Tt was just day before yesterday that the twins were tumbling
around the floor at the Pump-House, beating each other amiably
over the head with their rattlers, and getting their heads stuck be-
tween the banisters. Outdoors under the pear tree, hitched by a
stout length of clothesline apiece to the trunk, and tethered short
enough so that they could not escape into the blazing sun and
burn to a crisp, they rocked themselves to sleep, sterns high in the
air, bald heads pillowed on the soft grass.
And Friday, grown miraculously tall, bass voices booming, the
twins erupted from the battered DeSoto, announced that it had
taken a little longer than they expected because of their having
gotten off the road at one point, and then introducing that classic
gambit, “When do we eat?”
The first 250 mile trip with the newly acquired driving license
is like the first paycheck, something that should be framed instead |
of thrown into the hopper. ! }
I had been waiting for slave labor to be delivered into my hands,
and here it was, beaming, equipped with dungarees and sneaks in
case Nonnie’s requirements should be of an exacting nature.
It seemed a fair trade. There was the gallon of grey deck
paint, flanked by two large brushes; and on the other hand, there
was the refrigerator with the makings of substantial meals.
We marked a chalkline down the middle of the porch and twin
‘brushes made tracks down the midline, working out to the steps on
either end. The pressure cooker coped with the braised beef, and
in no time at all supper was ready and the front porch was finished.
The kitchen porch took: a little more organizing. During the
winter it had accumulated this and that, ’including at least ten chair
frames which were in need of caning.
_ But the kitchen porch now gleams with its grey deck paint and
the trash barrels bulge. The chair frames hang on hooks far above
the caning table, and the chest of caning materials is pushed
under the work table. There is an amazing amount of floor space.
The twins, cleaning off their hands with turpentine, betrayed
interest in the attic. There was probably something up there for
a bonus. Nonnie usually arranged a bonus for services rendered,
in addition to plenty of hot groceries.
So, up to the attic, the twins running their hands easily along
the banisters instead of sticking their heads through the railings
as they did fifteen years ago.
And, up in the attic, the prize. Twin prizes.
A ship’s_clock and a ship's bell, relics of a shopping binge in
Seattle years ago, the bell's brazen tongue muffled in newsprint of
1946, the clock all ready to tick when shaken gently, panting to
chime four bells, six bells, eight bells.
“Eight bells, sir.”
“Make it so.”
with its clamor.
“Better stow the clock and the bell in the trunk for the trip
back to Virginia, kids.”
“Hide the clock and the bell in the trunk?”
“Oh, well, maybe they WOULD ride better on the seat. But
you better not go clanging down the road. The ‘State Police will
take a dim view of any extra racket coming from that DeSoto. Could
be it might call attention to your lack of a turn signal.” ;
And the twins are gone, leaving behind them shining grey decks,
and looking forward to installing the ship's clock and the ship’s bell
in their room in Herndon.
’
®
And the ship's bell rouses the neighborhood
light to teen agers as well as ones |
small children hoping for your quick |
: ace
| S&H STAMPS
With 5.50 Purchase
|
|
|
|
ity, especially during the month of !
and Coupon Below.
GIFTS sure to please DAD’
on Father's Day, June 16
100| Globe in Luzerne [100
100 S&H STAMPS
In Addition to Regular Stamps on
Cash Purchases of 5.50 or more.
This Coupon Good Thru
June 12
100| Throughout Store [100
® Dickies
Work and Casual Slacks
Walk Shorts -
HANES - HEALTH KNIT
FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM
Underwear
“Campus” Sport and
Knit Shirts -
““Campus” Swim
Trunks
© SPECIAL!
25% off
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN’S Regular and
Summer Weight
SLACKS
now s4.48 ant up
Dacron Blends
Included!
\
2.99 vw
99> =
1
7
i
VAN HEUSEN
- And this perfect summer shirt is
comfortable in more ways than one !
First of all, you’ll like the sheer,
fine Pima Batiste—practically
weightless and oh, so cool! Then you'll
go for the non-resin Vanalux finish which
means you can spin-dry,
tumble-dry, air-dry or
commercially launder
this shirt—perfectly
every time. The wash ’n
wear is guaranteed to
last as long as the shirt.
Doesn’t that give you a
comfortable feeling ? Dual collar, worn
open or closed. Short sleeves. White or
pastel colors. Comfortable price, too— $4.25
Lo aie 5