The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 11, 1963, Image 2

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ON A — PAGE 2
I THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
a
1
- Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
' Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
180
o"
>
=
©
-
Publishers Association
On a
® .
Cunt
~ year; $2.50 eix months.
| held for more than 30 days.
to be placed on mailing list.
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
six months. Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
“More Than A Newspaper,
: Now In Its 73rd Year”
A nen-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
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
Subcription rates: $4.00 a
A Community Institution
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 subgeription
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
x 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 85¢ per column inch.
Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.15.
Single eopies at a rate of 10¢ 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;
3 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.
Editorially
~ Sabin oral vaccine long ago.
~~ No date has
: when?
children. protected.
Salk vaccine is effective.
oungsters.
dren for immunization.
result is by legislation.
been set for inoculation in Luzerne
county, and the polio season is upon us.
‘Medical Association is going along with the project, but
3 } Polio shots have been available now for years.
The newer oral vaccine
Speaking:
Polio Inoculation
In the matter of mass polio ‘inoculation Luzerne
~ County has been dragging its heels.
Wyoming County had its mass inoculation of the
Luzerne County
: ‘The way it looks to us, there is no time to wait for
‘a date in the fall. It is now that we need the protection.
: It is a wry commentary on human nature that parents
who wrung their hands ten years ago, praying for a vac-
cine against polio, have been negligent in having their
The
is easier to sell to the
Here again, parents will neglect to bring their chil-
: ) They say, it’s too much trouble,
~ and if other children are protected, how will our own
children catch it? Let other folks get inoculated.
How many parents would have their children vacci-
nated against smallpox if it were not the law of the land
~ that school admission hinges upou a vaccination scar?
Polio could be wiped out practically overnight if
everybody cooperated instead of being bone lazy.
Apparently the only way of accomplishing the desired
It Came Out of Nowhere
“It just came out of nowhere, judge.”
That's the thinnest alibi for a traffic accident that
it’s possible to cook up, and folks should invent something
different.
Something like, “I just
wasn't paying attention to
that side road and my mind was a hundred miles away.”
Cars don’t come out of nowhere.
tiolpated:
They can be an-
But KIDS can come out of nowhere, dashing from be-
tween parked ‘cars or riding a runaway bicycle.
A ball bouncing into the street is followed ALWAYS
. . . repeat ALWAYS .
. by a youngster in hot pursuit,
and if you don’t get your brakes on, you'll be telling it
to the judge. Highways are for kids as well as for cars.
Kids are completely incalculable.
Pedestrians could do a little something to make thei.
selves safer, too, but don’t depend on it.
Pedestrians seldom attack cars.
their baby carriages down the highway, inviting disaster.
But they trundle
They walk after dark, wearing dark clothing, secure
in the belief that they are visible.
And if you hit a pedestrian, no matter how careless
he is, you're just plain lucky if you have a good healthy
insurance policy to take up the slack. Nothing can com-
pensate for the shock of knowing that you have hit some-
body. But financial coverage goes a long way to cushion
the disaster.
Take it easy during the season of heavy traffic.
Penns Woods Notebook
By Jim Hopple
This is the time of the year when
our birds are having ‘their young,
one of the most well known of
which is the robin.
The robin is likely to be the first
bird thet a child will know by name,
d lives in all parts of the state.
It seems to like to be near people.
t is big enough to be seen very
pasily, and hops about on the ground
looking for food.
Most of our robins go south for
the winter, They come back in ear-
ly spring. The sight of a robin is
usually ong of the first signs of
The bird got its name by mistake.
‘When the early settlers saw it, it
eminded them of .the robin red-
i they had known in the Old
Bo they called it a robin.
‘it is not a close relative of the
adbreast, It is a zguch closer
relative of the bluebird and the
thrushes, It belonge to the thrush
family.
The robin builds a very sturdy
nest, made of sticks, leaves, and
grass cemented together with mud.
The nests are often found around
or close to houses. The mother robin
lays from three to five blue eggs.
The adults are kept busy finding
worms and insects. In about ten
days the young are covered with
feathers, They have speckled breasts
that remind us that they are cousins
of the thrushers.
Robins, like people, eat both plant
and animal food. You may mot keep
a robin if you find one, and if it is
not harmed do mot pick it up. If the
robin is harmed in some way you
are to take it to the nearest Game
Commission Office or tell your local
game protector.
For Beautiful
PRINTING
id The Post
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Huppened
30 Years Ago
The older section of the old Raub
Hotel was being razed by Gene Fo-
gle, the newer or tower section re-
maining.
Shirley Louise Cobleigh, 5, was
instantly killed when run over by a
truck operated by her father, Ken-
neth Cobleigh, while backing into
his coal yard in Fernbrook.
Haying was progressing well, with
good stands in the area in spite of
drought.
Beavers were becoming a nui-
sance, destroying property. Game
Commission planned a trapping sea-
son.
‘White lines to mark traffic lanes
were asked for on the Luzerne-
Trucksville highway, where trucks
and slow moving vehicles blocked
traffic.
Kingston Township
reported finamces
with a reduction in debt of $1,000.
Shrine View residents were inves-
tigating cost of drilling a well for
community water supply. |
Farm income in Pennsylvania was
down 50 percent.
Died: in New York, Marguerite
Harmon, native of Noxen:.
Risley’s Hardware Store adver-
tised lowest prices in years for
building materials, urged folks who
needed to repair their buildings to
do it without delay, pumping life-
blood into the community economy.
First National Bank of Dallas had
assets of $654,059.11.
Tomato puree was six cans for a
quarter; mayonnaise 15 cents a pint;
baked beans 6 cans for two bits;
butter 2 pounds 59 cents; smoked
picnics, 10 cents a pound, coffee 17
cents,
supervisors
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Plea for blood for men in the
service netted omly eight volunteers
from ‘the Back Mountain. All the
rest of the 27 original volunteers
chickened out.
Company A of State Guard
planned to encamp at Irem Country
Club.
Gale Clark, secretary of Monroe
Township school board, resigned.
Thomas Lloyd, 18, Trucksville,
drowned while swimming with fel-
low soldiers at Camp Stewart,
Georgia.
Chief Fred Swanson amd his Lake
firefighters confined a stubborn
blaze at Sunset, saving nearby cot-
tages amd stores when a second floor
apartment was gutted in property
belonging to Charles Randall.
Damage done by fire to Lake
Township high school two weeks
earlier was estimated at $4,200.
Ban om pleasure driving cancelled
out much of the summer activity at
Harveys Lake.
Joe MacVeigh was elected presi-
dent of Dallas Borough Council, and
Nichola Cave was named to fill the
vacancy caused by resignation of
Peter D. Clark.
Heard from im the Outpost: Earl
Williams, Savannah; Albert Mekeel,
Camp Pickett; Tom C.: Malkemes,
Fort Bliss; D. Campbell, Texas; Al-
bert Garinger, Colorado; Eugene
Fogle, San Francisco APO; Benjamin
Brace, Nashville.
Wyoming County Fair was can-
celled. No gas. But folks arrived
on horseback and by buggy to see a
swimming exhibition at Irem Coun-
try Club.
Died: Dorothy Wentzel, 10, at
Lehman. Fred Weaver, 58, Hunts-
ville, Henry M. Rogers, 85, Lake
Township native. Mrs. Helen C.
Marsh, 52, Lehman.
Married: Bernice Cook to Richard
Miner.
Arch Austin, former supervisor of
Monroe Township schools, was made
personnel manager of Wilkes-Barre
Carriage Company defense plant,
while on leave of absence from
teaching,
Miss Eleanor Atkinson, 82, was
honored by her Bible Class at an
Idetown picnic.
It Happened
10 Years Ago
Arthur Gay contributed a hun-
dred year old passenger pigeon net
to the Seventh Library Auction,
Annual exodus to tobacco camps
in Connecticut was well under way,
with many young folks of the area
enlisted.
Dallas-Franklin school board re-
organized, with Thomas Moore as
president, succeeding John Perry.
Jointure was in the wind. Pro-
posed was a semior high school
Back Mountain,
pervising principal of Dallas Bor-
ough-Kingston Township, showed
school.
Barnyard Notes outlined plans for
the Auction, said that Friends Mag-
azine, Chevrolet mational mag, was
sending a photographer to cover the
event, result of a story Bucks for
Books in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
(Story was written by Hix, illustrat-
ed by Jimmie Kozemchak.)
Married: Shirley Dougal to Calvin
H. Strohl. Grace M. Schminke to
Paul Winter. Rose Picaretta ‘to Peter
Ondish. Mavis Fancher to Coral R.
Ide.
in good ' shape, |
which would accommodate pupils
from all ten school districts of the
Jameg Martin, su-:
slides outlining population centers!
and possible location of such a joint!
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1963
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters
Just recently I was told, in the
western part of the state, that the
local milk processing and distribut-
ing plant operated by one of the big
dairies had been closed outright,
leaving thirty dairy farmers, with
big lifetime investments, no market
for their milk. The company is im-
porting milk over 125 miles from
New York State and selling it to
local consumers, In addition to the
blow to the farmers, there are com-
plaints by the consumers on the
keeping qualities of the milk, which
must be at least two days old on
arrival in the area.
No authoritative figures are avail-
able, but as told by one of the con-
sumers, the company can buy milk
in New York State about 40 cents a
cwt. cheaper than locally. The local
price is fixed by the Pennsylvania
Milk Control Commission, but there
is no regulation covering what a
Pennsylvania buyer has to pay in
New York State for milk he pro-
poses to sell in Pennsylvania. Rather
than sacrifice their entire invest-
ment and livelihood, it is probable
that the local farmers would have
been compelled to accept the 40
cent, cut, but this would be illegal.
This is a new development in that
area and just what will happen to
the farmers remains to be seen.
About all they cam do is to try to
spread out the sales to surrounding
dairies, while they already have a
surplus now, thus reducing the
drinking milk percemtage and the
farmers’ prices over a wider area.
In the meantime, over the pro-
tests of The Dairymen’s League and
others, Federal exam'mers in the
month of May allowed representa-
tives from Wisconsin and Minnesota
to present proposals for supplying
and pricing milk in ten northeastern
markets including New England
points down to Washington, D. C.
For a long time, midwest prices have
| prevailed for butter and other man-
ufactured milk products: and most
of the eastern market has been tak-
en over by midwestern suppliers.
This is true right in our local super-
markets where butter, canned milk,
cheese, etc., are chiefly furnished by
midwest sources.
It is not too lomg ago that nearly
every small’ town in the Pennsyl-
vania dairy region had a creamery.
A good local example is Harring-
toms at Dushore. ‘With the Glendale
at Wilkes-Barre and other plants
this was taken over by Woodlawn,
then through various changes, with
always more territory added, by
Foremost from the Philadelphia
Dairy. ‘As reported in the daily
press, Foremost Dairies, Inc. in 1962
made a profit of $5,380,000, an in-
crease of over $400,000 over the
year before. But the Federal Trade
Commission went to work on them
under the monopoly laws and the
company agreed to sell about a
quarter of their sources of income.
Foremost made a deal to sell to
‘bargaining positions of
Motec Industries, New York City. To
quiet complaints, that firm has an-
nounced plans to reactivate The
Philadelphia Dairy for operating
purposes and to employ for manage-
ment services Walter Justin and
Associates. They expect to make as
much profit as Foremost made on
the same properties, maybe more,
which means the farmer gets no re-
lief from them.
Federal and state authorities fix
prices paid to local farmers on the
basis of milk sold for drinking and
that sold for manufacturing, in some
areas a blended, or average, price.
These prices are always fixed under
an atmosphere of a perpetual sur-
plus. The only formula I have seen
covers the Philadelphia area in the
1950's. It is probably still used. It
was based on Index prices covering
five items: wholesale prices in U.S.
of all commodities; Pennsylvania
price of 20% dairy feed; prices re-
ceived for other farm products in
Pennsylvania; midwest condensery
prices; and the formula class I milk
sales, These were averaged into a
composite index, under which in ten
years prices were raised 20 cents
four times and dropped 20 cents six
times with a net drop of 40 cents.
None of the components was domi-
nant every time in the changes. A
committee reported to USDA that
sometimes the actual prices received
by farmers was less than the calcu-
lated price under the formula, and
a weakness of the formula was “the
establishment of class I prices some-
what on the low side during the past
few years considering prices in sur-
rounding markets”. The Philadel-
phia federal order class I price has
been somewhat below the calculated
cost of obtaining fluid milk from the
midwest”.
The USDA has estimated that in
164 markets east of the Rockies,
dealers buying prices in 1960-61 in-
creased an average of 18.7 cents per
100 lbs. for each 100 miles distance
from Eau Claire, Wisconsin, more in
the Middle Atlantic markets.
Charges for weighing, testing, cool-
ing and loading prior to shipment
averaged 37 cents per hundred
pounds. Long distance shipment of
bulk milk showed an average trans-
portation rate of 16.4 cents per 100
Ibs. per 100 miles. Larger tankers,
better roads, and more direct routes
have made transportation cheaper
and faster. All these figures would
not apply in any particular area,
some are higher and some lower. In
gemeral the bigger operations are
cheaper.
Besides distance from major milk
supply areas, difference in prices
paid to farmers by dealers are af-
fected by federal and state regula-
tions, supply and demand conditions
in the immediate local area, and the
producers
and distributors.
None of these seem to offer much
hope for the dairy farmer.
Ready To ‘Whip Up A Batch Of Auction Fudge
Mrs. Dean Johnson and Mrs. Paul | Edward Johnson, are ready to make
Lauer, co-chairmen of the Auction |fudge for the Library Auction in
Candy Booth, with two mémbers
of the Junior Womans Club com-
mittee, Mrs. Elston Brace and Mrs.
the Johnson kitchen. The booth
solicits candy of all varieties for
sale Thursday Friday amd Saturday.
—Photo by Kozemchak
Eastern Star Takes
Hemors At Meeting
Dallas Chapter #396 Order of the
Eastern Star received many honors
at the Grand Chapter Sessions, Sy-
ria Mosque, Pittsburgh, the week of
June 24 when Mrs. Oce Beryl Austin
was installed as the District Deputy
Grand Matron to preside over the
twelve chapters of District 21 A for
the 1963-1964 term; Mrs. Elma Price
wag active as a Grand Page during
the Grand Sessions; and Mrs. Betty
Meeker served on the Warder Com-
mittee.
Mrs. Austin was also privileged
and grateful to accept a $400 Estral
Award for Lynn McCarty, who is
attending Union College; Kentucky.
Featured In Recital
Linda Remville, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs, J. A. Renville, Luzerne
will present her Senior Voice Re-
cital at Trucksville Methodist Edu-
cational Building on Friday evening
at 8 pm.
A student of Mrs. Ruth Turn
Reynolds, she will specialize in semi
classical selections. John Wardell
Trucksville will assist her with
trumpet offerings.
Contents of CARE’S $1 Food Cru-
sade packages average 25 lbs. or
‘more of food for the needy overseas.
Safety Valve
EVERYBODY WAS CONCERNED
To the Dallas Post:
Now that our family is all to-
gether again and we kmow every-
thing is going to be ok. we would
like to thank our friends and
neighbors: for ‘their prayers and
genuine concern over Jackie's re-
cent illness .
Jackie just had to get well with
so many wishing him well. We are
very humble and this makes it dif-
ficult to say more than thanks with
a capital T. Qur special thanks go
to the Dallas Ambulance who in
less tham three hours notice had us
on our way to Philadelphia.
Boyd White released Ray Titus
for the day and Jack Sheehan was
a most cheerful and excellent
driver. Virginia Lowe, efficient
amd lovable nurse gave up part of
her vacation to go with Jack. She's
tops. Her chief concern was for
Jack and our entry to Hospital was
that much easier because of her
All of these ptople refused re-
muneration amd the Jack Barnes
family are just the luckiest family
in the Back Mountain. ‘We shall
never forget this. We can’t think
of a better place to live than here.
Hope we are deserving of all we
have received in the way of love
and concen these past few weeks.
The Jask Barnes family
Nobody would suspect that the dance.
Queen of the Rodeo at Lehman
Horse-Show is twenty-four years old | formerly of
and has five children. Walter Me- | Baltimore,
keel, chairman of the Parade, crowns | | radio from Gogsart’s; a wallet from] a
a chilly Marilyn Yeisley at half past | | | Shel Evans; a wicker handbag from | |! Vivia, and Dick Demmy complete
ten gallons of gas from | the group.
midnight on the
grounds, after the press of rodeo | Ross
Horse-Show | McCrory’s;
wife of Keith Yeisley,
Shavertown, now of!
received a transistor |
Marilyn,
Williams; a Rodeo Sundae
events had cancelled out the square from Forty ‘Fort Ice-Cream;* and
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
The Rodeo Queen -
jewelry fom Gace Cave.
~~ Mrs. ‘Stuart Marks stands along-
side the queen, and runners-up Mary
| Beth Carey and Elaine Hunt lend
smile. . Willard Garey, Barbara
Photo by Paramocmt Studio
Better Leighton Never
by Leighton Scott
Most of last week and this we are
spending right around home, of
course, because of the Horse Show
and the Auction.
I spent the better part of the
Fourth stalking around the arena
in Lehman taking pictures. One
common question I get is: How
many have you taken? Answer: Be-
tween 80 and a hundred. I forget
how many rolls I brought along.
I took most of my shots of people,
because I don’t know one horse
from another. It's a fact that I pre-
fer people to horses. But chiefly
the reasom I don’t photograph
horses is that I don’t know anything
about them.
It was nice to see members of the
local Cloverleaf 4-H Club do so well.
They are old friends of ours at the
Post, and bring in their club news
regularly.
People kept telling me what a
nice day it was for the show, which
I had to agree to, temperature-wise
at least. But between the flying dust
in the morning and that sneaky old
sun in the afternoon, I felt at the
end of the day like somebody who
was just run out of town.
Crowds were everything the Vol-
unteer Firemen could have hoped
for, and included, as always, people
like me, who come out for the fes-
tivities, and don’t know a horse
from a house.
From last year, I knew enough to
sneak over to the Auxiliary tent for
early lunch, because as soci as they
announce ‘‘soup’s on”, ya can’t get
near the place. They always have a
terrific bill of fare.
I think maybe if the entries are
going to show up so enthusiastically
for the evening events the night be-
fore the Fourth, they ought to start
a little earlier. By 10:45 p.m., with
two events znd a square dance to
go, I was parked on an anonymous
bale of hay, staring glascily at the
ground, while an equally despcind-
ent young feller in western garb sat
next to“ me; His tale of woe: His
friend still had his horse, which he
needed for a coming event.
What a dummkopf I-was.
out to photograph ‘the parade,
parked in the show grounds, and
had to hitch out to Lehman Center.
Lanceford Sutton, who picked me
up, looked doubtful at my idea of
I drove |
taking pictures from the fire engine, |
pointing out that they'd be at the |
| 5
end of the procession.
He was right. Anybody see a
stupid-looking photographer run-
ning about one mile along the high-
way trying to catch up to the front
end of the parade?
AUCTION -
You want to come over to my
place some time, and I'll show you
a five-string banjo which my granny
bought me at the second or third
auction for fifteen dollars. As solid
as it was when made, semi-custom,
around 1875, it has been priced (be-
fore the folk-song boom, even) be-
tween $175 and $200 by an expert.
I was horror-stricken last Satur-
day momming to look out the front
door and see Bob Fleming sighting
through his outspread arms toward
the Post and saying “It'll just about
fit right here.”
“Whatever you're selling; T don’t
like it”,
he could get in the door.
“We just want to put up a tent
out there”, he said.
1 thought: Gosh, the auction is
getting big.
“We've got a camping tent to
auction off’, he explained, “amd
thought it would bring a better
price if we could show it pitched”.
“All week?”, I asked softly,
thinking oh well, he knows more
about what he’s doing than I do.
“No, no, just for six hours or so
Friday night”, he chuckled as he
walked back out to his car, and I
could hear him laughing to e himself;
“All week. n
I projected hastily before |:
From—
Pillar To Post...
By
Hix
The last paragraph in the letter said:
~ “I trotted down and donated five bucks after, they came up
and cut Charlie out of the barrel.”
For intriguing understatements, that certainly takes the prize.
. (It would date me too completely to say it took the barbed wire
garters or the fur-lined bathtub.)
No inkling of how Charlie got in the barrel, or whether they
scraped the bottom of the barrel in getting Charlie out.
What kind of a barrel?
A metal oil drum requiring a blow torch?
A simple affair of staves and metal hoops, requiring only to be
pulled carefully apart like plucking the petals from a daisy?
For the matter of that, who's Charlie ?
Careful perusal of the roster of grandchildren reveals no Charlie,
that is no Charlie down Herndon way.
Could be one in Massa-
‘chusetts, though he is normally referred to as Scotty.
Also, who got the five bucks?
The volunteer firemen ?
The local ambulance association ?
The Amalgamated Order of Welders and Unwelders ?
In the meantime, the thought of Charlie curled like an anchovy
in ajbarrel is constantly with me. # It must have been a tight! fit, or
Charlie would not have needed to be cut out.
Did somebody feed
Charlie an extra sandwich after he crawled into the barrel, thereby
swelling Charlie enough so that he could not emerge?
If Charlie got in, why couldn’t he get out?
Fu di die of tiny before I find out.
@h
Tibrary “Tucton Grr | Calf
Joe Parks poses with, the three
month old Guernsey heifer calf, his
donation to the Library Auction, in
front of his home in Lehman. Mr.
Parks is a school ‘teacher of long
standing, but a farmer at heart,
with a considerable acreage in Leh-
man Township,
Shel Evans, chairman of live-
stock, reports that his right-hand
man Jimmy Richardson has
rounded up not omly puppies, but
pigeons and rabbits, ducks, and
even bantam chickens. The Auc-
tion lamb will come as usual from
Herman Thomas, and another lamb
from Peter Skopic., a bottle baby
complete with bottle.
Dr. Richard Post has promised to
give the first immunizing shot free
for each puppy or dog bought at the
Auction.
Latest news is that young tur-
keys (live) will go over the block,
gift of Doc Jordan.
And that a parakeet has joimed
the gang.
—Photo by Shel
Well,
thought? I mean, the chairman
comes and sights in to put a tent
on your lawn, and doesn’t say how
big a tent or for how long, and . . .
Oh, well, ya had to be there.
See you at the auction.
what would you havej
CARD OF THANKS
Allen Lee Landmesser wishes to
thank all those who extended their
sympathy on the recent sudden
death of this brother, Walter
Stewart Landmesser of Baltimore,
Md.
The Dallas. Post . . .
Uses The famous
Kenro Camera In Its
OFFSET DEPARTMENT
CORRECTION
Mr, and Mrs. Ray Good, Shick-
shinny, have been close friends with
‘the Arthur Newmans since 1916,
e
ri