The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 03, 1963, Image 2

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    SECTION A — PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Mamber Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
Entered ‘as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879.
No subscriptions accepted for less than
year; $2.50 six months.
six months,
Out-of-State subscriptions;
Subcription rates: $4.00 a
$4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
“More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
Now’ In Its
73rd Year”
A nen-partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
We will not be responsible for the return of unsoliatied manu-
ts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed,
- 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
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 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 mnewstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store,
Colonial Restaurant,
Daring’s
Market, Gosart’s Market,
Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's
Trucksville
Drug Store;
Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy;
Idetown — (Cave’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher’s
Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman—Stolarick’s Store;
Noxzen — 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.
Editorially Speaking:
It's Auction Time
Tt’s Auction time.
Get yourself three or four cartons,
and fill them with things for the Odds and Ends booth.
There are always white elephants around the house, tak-
ing up space, asking to be dusted. You need a change of
scenery and the Auction needs the odds and ends.
It is
astonishing how those small items, priced at fabulously
low figures, do bring in the money.
And the Antiques table is asking for small things
that can be sold directly to customers without going over
the auction block. Things like crocks with blue decora-
tions on them, bits of china.
Got some books for children? - The book booth needs
plenty of picture books, things your own children have
enjoyed, but outgrown.
Know how to make good, cinnamon buns? home-
baked bread? layer cake?
sugar cookies? Bake up a
batch and deliver fresh and hot, right to the baked goods
booth next Thursday night, or Friday and Saturday.
There never is enough home-made bread or cinnamon
buns. Cupcakes are always popular. Ice some with white
frosting and decorated faces for the kids.
Enjoy the Lehman Horse-Show this week, and don’t
miss the Library Auction next weekend. They’ re the
summer events that you can 't afford to miss.
: The smorgasbord is a new feature, replacing the
customary barbecue designed to speed service and get you
back to the Auction grounds in time for the first bid of
the year at 7:30, on Thursday night. Smorgasbord is a
one-evening only affair.
the rest of the time.
Eat at the refreshment booth
Plenty of hot dogs and hamburgers,
cold platters, hot coffee to take the chill off, along toward
midnight.
Lusty Giant
(Conttuued trom Page 1 A)
Bert Hill reinforced the outraged
baa of the Herman Thomas lamb
from his stance back of the loud-
speaker.
It was a sign of status in the
community to be singled out to buy
one of Bert's gardenia corsages.
Howard ran his eye over the audi-
ence and called the roll.
Sometimes a thunderstorm put an
end to the auction, and everybody
took a raincheck.
Howard was chairman of the
tenth auction, when it rained cats
and dogs on the opening day, and
the refreshment stand did a land-
office business in hot coffee while
radio announcements alternated
between hope and despair.
Each year found the Library Auc-
tion growing.
Times changed. The Antiques
committee, which had started out
as- small potatoes, burgeoned into
a tremendous organization,
The New Goods Committee, just
a dot on the horizon the first three
or four years, skyrocketed.
There was complaint about Mrs.
Whozit’s potato salad, and Mrs.
Whatsit certainly must have gotten
her baked beans out of a can. The
refreshment stand started to buy
its food instead of having it con-
tributed from home kitchens.
The Auction went into high gear.
There was no longer any time for
horsing around on the auction block.
Everything had to move fast, to
earn its place on the stand.
But you can still find a spool
bed or a spinning wheel at the
Library Auction, and the rural at-
mosphere persists.
It remains the most fun of any-
thing in the Back Mountain, draw-
ing the community together as
nothing else has ever done,
Sixteen years of library auctions,
with another coming up July 11,
12, and 13.
LEK KF
FOR
OF
BACK MT.
LIBRARY
OUR BEST WISHES
SUCCESS
LEHMAN HORSE SHOW
AND
THE
THE
MEMORIAL
AUCTION
Main Street
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BUDDIES
ame
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Happened
.30 Years Ago
Atty .and Mus. Peter Jurchak
were off for Europe, where Mr. Jur-
chak was to represent America at
the unveiling of a monument in
Czechoslovakia to the founder of the
First Catholic Union.
Construction of a new road be-
tween Tunkhannock and Dallas was
still up in the air. Scranton-based
surveys indicated that many sharp
curves would be eliminated, but no-
body could say when work would
likely start. Wyoming Valley Motor
Club, Norman Johnstone spokes-
man, stated that the route was an
important shorcut; a direct link in
the Washington. to Canada route.
Residents protested. trolley fares,
holding that Wilkes-Barre Transit
would do more business if it would
lower the price between and Dallas
and central city. One way, by ticket,
20 cents.
Dallas, Shavertowm and Trucks-
ville were already talking in terms
of a joint sewage system, for which
Federal funds might be available.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Boston,
sailing the “Good Ship Jolly Roger,”
won the Fourth of July race at Lake
Carey.
John Hackling, 54, died at the
home of his daughter Mrs. Guy
Fritz in Noxen.
Heavy traffic on the Fourth, but
no accidents of any moment
Heavy weekend storm damaged
or felled many trees.
Picture of a big black bear on
North Mountain dressed up the
front page.
Shavertowm arranged to let home-
owners work out their overdue
taxes.
Abundant spring rainfall insured
a good berry crop.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Lt. Kenneth Westover, former
Dallas boy, was killed in the crash
of a Flying Fortress in the State
of Washington. He had won his
wings in Texas two months earlier.
Fire gutted two rooms at Laketon
school. Cause was defective wiring.
Frank B. Kaymor and Frank E.
Matukitis headed the page as flyers
from Dallas Township, having grad-
uated from Gulf Coast Training
Center.
Rev. Harold Durkin was trams-
ferred from St. Therese’s ‘to Strouds-
burg. Father John J. O'Leary, retir-
ed because of ill health, was re-
called to the pastorate at St. There-
se’s.
Early morning dip at Harveys
Lake netted a Kingston youth a
broken head, when he struck the
old steamboat pier.
Peter D. Clark, Dallas, was nam-
ed treasurer of Luzerne County.
Heard from the Outpost: Len Hop-
per, Shreveport; Durwood Splitt,
North Africa; Arden: R. Evans,
Louisiana; Herman Brislin, Arizona;
Florence Rusiloski, Arkansas; Thel-
ma Gregory, with the Marines;
Grace Ide, Florida; Willis Ide, Nash-
“ville; Paul J. Gallagher, Rockland;
Bob Appleton, Indiana; Lewis W. Le.
Grand, and Gilbert Huey, San Fran-
cisco APO; Herb Updyke, Camp Ed-
wards; Louis M. Kelly, Chapel Hill;
Herbert Jomes, Boston; Donald Dav-
is, Camp Crowder; Thomas Temp-
lin, North Africa; Robert Misson,
San Francisco.
Dr. Robert Bodycomb headed Ro-
tary Club.
Married: Dorothy Ruth Warner to
Norris Hendrickson. Lottie Frear to
Ellis Meeker.
Died: Mame Kitchen Rosengrant,
Herveys Lake.
It Happened
I0 Years Ago
Myron Baker was made general
manager of Commonwealth.
Dr. Richard Crompton, discharged
from service with the Army, re-
opened his office.
Stanley Hemning was promoted to
general foreman of the Buffalo plant
of Bethlehem Steel.
Larry Beth, 2, was doing well
after being run over by his father’s
car, standing in the driveway at
Meadowecrest.
Bad drought, sprinkling of lawns
during daytime forbidden.
Dallas Post-Office got first class
rating July 1.
Married: Carolyn Hoffman, to Carl
H. DeWitt.
Anniversary: Col. and Mrs. Dor-
rance Reynolds, Golden Wedding.
* Died: Mrs, Mary R. Scowell, 71,
Meeker.
Fanti’s Pond had its first drown-
ing in 17 years. Dragging recovered
the body of a 19 year old Luzerne
boy, John Chisak.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
| Glen,
THE DALLAS POST, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1963
A EE RN EE RN A RR SN NN NN AN RNR
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer
— D. A. Waters
Never ‘did I see such a profusion
of beautiful laurel as we had this
year in the third week of June. It
was nice almost everywhere, but
there was a particularly fine stand
of deep pink out along route 118
about ten miles west of Ricketts
It stretched back through
open woods as far as the eye could
see, acres of it, on both sides of
the road. Our legislators did all
right thirty years ago when they
adopted Kalmia latifolia as our
state flower.
Change, progress, and improve-
ment can sometimes be exasperat-
ing. We all know ‘the annoyance
of flagmen, swinging booms, detours,
narrow and rough pavement, dust
and mud, and other items incident
to road constsuction. We have leama-
ed to live with them, and no doubt
will have our patience sorely tried
in ‘the next few months.
But when, two days in succession,
you drive half a day over good
mountain roads, drinking water
from flowing springs famous in In-
dian times, enjoying brisk mountain
air, miles of green mountain
| scenery with deep gorges and clear
steraus, for ‘the particular purpose
of seeing specific things, and find
the place closed for “improve-
ments”, it is downright frustrating.
‘At Drake Well Park, Oil Creek,
which turned out to be a good-sized
stream, flows quietly by and most
of the woods is undisturbed. The
replica of the original well building
is in place with similar but not the
| the original machinery. Boulders a
few feet away mark the site of the
original well, and honor various
persons prominent in early oil his-
tory. But the museum was closed
for additions and all the material
stored in town. The previous build-
ing is half torn down and being en-
larged to about the size of three
high school gyms.
The crude oil was first pumped,
then flowing wells erupted some
with 3000 barrels per day. This re-
‘quired transportation, containers,
and refineries, and whole new towns
sprang up almost overmight. Rafts
were used on ‘the streams and thous-
ands of teams carried barrels of oil,
constantly increasing prices until
they asked about half what the oil
was worth at the mearest railhead.
This caused Samuel Van Syckel, who
is represented by a tablet, to con-
struct a two inch pipe line a dis-
tance of five miles from Pithole to
Miller Farm, the first in the* world,
which moved oil at a fraction of the
teamsters’ charge and put them out
of business. A replica of the first
railroad tank car, a small flat car
with two big inverted wood tubs,
each holding 40 to 45 gallon of crude
oil, is on display. It was placed in
use in 1865, replaced by present
type metal tank cars in 1869.
Boom towns sprang up right and
left. Most fabulous was Pithole. Tt
contained four log cabins im May,
1865. In three months it was a city
of 15,000 with fifty hotels, banks,
churches, newspaper, water system,
and a railroad. The following year
in February, some of the water wells
began to show oil and some of the
oil wells began to go dry. There
were several large fires and panic
siezed the town when an ice jam in
the creek flooded the town. Pumps
and other equipment were removed
elsewhere and buildings torn down.
The postoffice, busiest in Pennsyl-
vania after Philadelphia and Pitts-
burgh, blocked up with wncalled-for
mail. The railroad went bamkrupt.
Everyone moved away. By 1868
there remained only six people,
making Pithole, now a grassy coun-
tryside, the most famous ghost town
in Pennsylvania.
Next day we went up to Fort Le
Beouf, on Riviere aux Beoufs, else-
where called French Creek, now in
the town of Waterford. Here also,
the museum was closed for altera-
tions and improvements, although
=
|SELINGO SIGNS
; SIGNS OF ALL KIND
BUILT - PAINTED
TRUCKS
WINDOWS
DISPLAYS
SHO-CARDS
PAPER SIGNS
SIGN CLOTH
SCOTCHLITE
ART WORK
no work was in evidence. There is a
statue of George Washington, the
site of an ancient well, and the Jud-
son House built in 1820, not nearly
as interesting as some houses right
in our own Wyoming Valley. A state
marker states that the site was the
location of three forts: The Fort Le
Boeuf built by the French in 1753,
abandoned by them in 1759; an
English fort built in 1760, burned
by Indians in 1763; and an Ameri-
can Fort built to protect settlers
in 1794. ]
George Washington called the Al-
legheny (a Delaware name) by the
Iroquois name, the Ohio. It is a good
long river draining over a third of
the state, with the other rivers com-
ing at Pittsburgh. In the middle
of Potter County, about in the mid-
dle of the Norther Tier, there is a
the Genessee leading to the Great
Lakes and the St. Lawrne, from that
into \ the Susquehanna and Ches-
peake Bay, from the Allegheny-
Ohio-Mississippi system leading to
the Gulf of Mexico. The Allegheny
long distance. Some of the tribu-
taries, such as the Clarion, are good
big rivers.
Penns Woods Notebook
By Jim Hopple
An action taken by the Pennsyl-
vania Game Commission im Harris-
burg has given hunters an extra
day ‘to bag their quota of one deer
apiece this year.
The commission adopted a two
day antlerless deer season for
December 16 and 17 after hearing
testimony that the state’s deer herd
was too large.
Forest industries and foresters
face the problem that too many
deer are eating up the mew, young
tree growth, especially of the most
valuable trees, said the representa-
tives.
In another action the commission
set the wild turkey season for most
of the state for November 2 to 16.
The season bag mis on turkeys is
one.
The open season on hares (snow-
! shoe rabbits) is December 26 to
January 4 with two the daily bag
limit and six the season limit. There
will be no open season on hares in
Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Centre,
Elk, Forest, Huntingdon, Jefferson,
Mckean, Somerset and Warren
Counties.
There is no closed season or bag
limits on raccooms, woodchucks,
‘grackles, skunks and opossums any-
where in the state,
There is no open season om hen
pheasants, cub bears, elk otters,
Hungarian partridges and" sharp-
tailed grouse. Hunting on Sunday
is prohibited.
IS SEVEN MONTHS
PAR FOR COURSE IN -
DRIVER LICENSES ?
It took seven months to get
here, but Mrs. Gertrude Eck-
ert’s application for a driver's
license is at hand, delivered
July 1.
Mrs, Eckert lives at 37 Hazel-
- tine Street in one of the only
two houses on that side. It
used to be 17 before Shaver-
town houses were renumbered.
The mailing address was Trucks-
ville RD 1.
Mrs. Eckert’s first applica-
tion was destroyed in the De-
cember holocaust when number-
- less applications were ditched.
She applied again; sent a third
application and a fourth, each
with the changed address.
In February she applied
through a personal service ar-
rangement and received her
license.
Now she has another license
application. Kindly enclose
check. :
a8 =
Mr .and Mrs. Charles Hogler, Par-
rish Street, had as guests recently
their’ daughter and family, Mr .and
Mrs, Don Mitchell, Allison, Sally
and Tad, Fairfax, Va.
FOREIGN JOBS
free transportation—special tax
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CALIFORNIA JOBS
watershed separating the flow into
is still navigable, with locks, for’
by Leighton Scott
CRAZY DAYS‘
Boy oh boy, the lazy, hazy, erazy
days were felt around here. last
week, even with our superior clime.
As fast as all those pesky gnats
floated - in. on the heat wave, just
so speedy were the afternoon swim-
ming set riding, crawling, , and
thumbing through dusty .construct-
ion to the Lake,
Cobwebs were being swept off
cottages from Lake Silkworth to
Root Holler.
Swimming areas at Laketon and
Warden Place weére very busy for
the first time this year, following
an unfortunately cold June.
How about them new two-piece
bathing suits ?, says one eagle-eyed
year-rounder at Harveys Lake..
Yeah, how about ’em? In one
turn around the lake, for not keep-
ing my eyes on the road, I just miss-
ed hitting: 1. a stalled family -car
2. a double-parked delivery vam 3.
the Lake Township truck. -
Thank heavens for the rain on
Saturday, or I would've been killed
for sure.
Who was that guy in the patrol
car who raced his engine passing
by two swimsuits walking n near the
picnic grounds?
AROUND TOWN
What do you think? will that
concrete wall which hangs over the
highway near Birch Grove fall on
motorists before it gets removed or
not? Seems to be supported by one. |
piece of steel stuck in the ground.
Don’t forget the parade from Leh-
man ‘to the Horseshow grounds to-
morrow at 8. Everybody’ll be there.
Unless the situation changes by
then, the mighty kamikaze Yamaha
Super Sport motorcycle, known as
“that scooter’, occasional mount of
Sir Leighton, won’t make the scene.
I can’t find the key.
To those friends who are spreading
a misconception: Jeanie js mot afraid
of airplanes. [She’s just scared she
won’t be able to talk British when
she get there. )
An aerial photograph of Dallas is
under study in Washington now, to
help decide where to put the new
postoffice, I've seen the picture.
Maybe they got better eyes than I
do, but, even knowing the terrain,
I couldn’t choose a spot for the post-
office from it. .
Home from the hospital is Red
Ambrose, supposed to be resting
from severe back ailment, but re-
portedly sneaking off to work, al-
though his doctors weren't even in |
agreement that he ought to be out
of the hospital bed. Ruth says he'd
‘like to see his friends at home, and
that it would be a good way to keep
him there.
Teenage crowd has moved to Han-
son’s pavilion Tuesday and Friday
nights for rock ’n roll. For those
over-twenty-one it looks like a quiet
B® | summer, unless you go to the valley.
Inmates at Chase Institution have
their salt shakers back, but still
have to cut their hamburger with
forks, after restrictions following
the Muslim riot.
Parents: If you can’t find little
Charley, there's a strong possibility
he’s playing Tom ‘Swift Joins the
Arapahoes in the auction tents. One
gets the distinct feeling of being
watched when one passes by the
grounds and sees the tent folds |
part ever so slightly, followed by
soft mutterings.
THE DALLAS POST
OFFSET DEPARTMENT
Is One Of The Finest
In "Pennsylvania
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
‘Better Leighton Never From —
Pillar To Post...
“What you do,” instructed: the voice on the telephone,
hit it with a towel and then throw it outdoors.”
“Won't it splash?”
“You don’t hit it that hard, dummy, just one good swipe with
the towel, and it will fall down on the floor, temporarily stunned.
The trick is to quick grab it before it wakes up and heave it out-
doors.” Z 2
“Isn’t there a ‘possibility that it will just fly out if T open the
door wide and turn off the lights?”
“Nope, it will just invite in all its brothers and sisters If you
open the door. "There is nothing quite so catching as bats.” The
voice trailed off for a moment and came back with renewed vigor,
“Except maybe fleas. Fleas are the MOST.”
“It isn’t just ONE bat. It's THREE bats.
all around to just shoot them down ?”
“Use a towel. That's the classic method of dealing with a bat.”
The bats continued to swoop in dizzying circles. Anybody
who says bats flit silently is nuts. Their wings make a definite
flutter as they pass closely overhead, and it’s all very well to com-
fort yourself with the reflection that bats have built-in radar systems
which prevent their colliding with anything, and that it is a ‘myth
that they like to tangle themselves in your hair.
I am still opposed to bats. :
It looked like a good idea to go out on the back porch and do
a spot of caning. The light might attract ¢he creatures, and, once on
the porch, they might stay there. The door could be slammed quickly
after a hurried rush into the kitchen. Then the bats would be im-
mured on the porch, and thescreen door could be: propped open
from outside, to permit free access to the back yard.
It worked according to schedule. The only drawback was that
“is to
Wouldn't it be simpler
_only one bat accepted the bait.
That left two bats still flitting about downstairs.
Now, let's see. If I go upstairs in the dark, leaving the light
on in the kitchen, the bats will never know that I have escaped. I
can shut the door into the hallway and the door into the stairwell.
And then I can turn on the bedside light and read a whodunit.
It worked like a charm. [For ten minutes it worked like a charm.
And then there was a swoop and a swift passage of wings, and there
were the two remaining bats, dive-bombing across the bed.
Maybe bats cannot enter through a keyhole, but these bats
used either the keyhole or the slim crack under the door.
Or maybe, grim thoughts, they were an entirely new set of bats,
and the original bats were still swooping around downstairs.
Only one thing to do. Turn off the lights, remove the screen
from the window, tie back the curtains, open the doors, and haul
the sheet snugly up over the head. Bats are nocturnal animals,
and by daylight they would find a spot to hang themselves up and
stop swooping.
And next night we could do the same thing all over again, me
and the bats.
Anybody who can swat a bat with a turkish towel must have
exceptional aim, or care nothing about the crockery.
Steeled against bats, and deciding to take them in my stride, I
turned on the lights the following night, and awaited the familiar
flit-flit-flit.
And there wasn’t a bat in sight.
But the television isn’t working, so mayhe there is a fried bat
within. :
Encouragement from the phone:
getting a belfry?”
sympathetic. !
How about
So
“You got bats?
That's the nice thing about the family.
Collies With Sloe car,
Lost Bapey,
A truck’ driven by Willard a
attack. ' He was not hurt.
A friendly black puppy wandered
vert, Fernbrook, collided with a |:
stump at the side of Harris Street into ihe home of Mes, Morgner
Saturday afternoon, after = the Goldsmith, Knob Hill, Trucksville,
driver reportedly had an asthma | early this week.
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5. . 9p
Se 49¢ - 55¢
JIM’S
VALLEY VIEW NURSERY
‘CHASE CORNERS
Fertilizers Gardening Tools @
: Flowers ® Fresh Produce
TREE SURGERY and LANDSCAPING
«se oe
Nomegionn SrawhaTles
5 Shrubs
tind iimtliitosistnmnnatbiadio
Becta
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
CONTACT LENSES
DR. |. BERGER
OPTOMETRIST
27 Machell Ave., Dallag
Phone 674-4921
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Foreign employment offers men and women choice of 19 countries—
tions—And a most unique way of life in government careers or
with American companies, their subsidiaries.
Americans work and live exceptionally well outside the U.S.A.
You can earn up to $1,600 per month paid in U.S. currency. For
Thousands of new job openings now in Southern California in all
fields. Permanent job security. Send $2 for job information, names
and addresses to California Jobs, P.O. Box 1944, Beverly Hills, Calif.
OVOP OOOO OOOO OO ODOOOOOO DN
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benefits—bonuses—liberal vaca-
Over a half million
Foreign Projects, P.O. Box 1945,
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HUNTSVILLE
674-8126
CC
CHOICE LOTS
FOR SALE
MN TE
“Briarwood Terrace”
MAIN ROAD, CHASE
e 696-2223
Sm ————
OPEN DAILY
es
Saturday, July 6th
SMORGASBORD
$2.78
FINE MUSIC
SPRING GROVE INN
(Located 5 miles north of Tunkhannock.
Rt. 29 at Lake Carey. )
FULL MENU
SOLAR HEAT 8
heating oil No
Get the world’s finest
‘heating oil, from
CHARLES H. LONG
Sweet Valley GR 7-221 1
BEST WISHES
to
LEHMAN HORSE SHOW
and
BACK MT. MEMORIAL:
LIBRARY AUCTION
STANTON'S
TV and Appliances
DALLAS SHOPPING CENTER
NER as . : IRE a Ta
Fr A RO PRR GEA i < i es
!
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WB
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