The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 08, 1963, Image 2

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    picnic meeting at the summer home
Bell.
~ bluth, the group’s senior president,
SECTION A. — PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
Member National Editorial Association
Publishers 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.
year; $2.50 six months.
six months.
Out-of-State subscriptions;
Subeription rates: $4.00 a
No subscriptions accepted for less than
$4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c.
“More Than A Newspaper,
A Community Institution
Now In Its T3rd 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-
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.
Alldw two weeks for change
{> be placed on mailing list.
of address or new subscription
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
{Or 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.
Nekional display advertising rates 84c per column inch.
Transient rates 80.
Politieal 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 — Caye’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher’s
Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman—=Stolarick’s Store;
Nozen — Scoufen’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern-
brook — Bogdon’s Store, ‘Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaur-
ant; Ltzerne — Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone’s Grocery.
Editor and Publisher
Associate Editors—
ees so en
MyYRA Z. RISLEY
Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks, LricaroNn R. Scott, JR.
Sacial Editor
Business Manager
Cireulation Manager
Sports
Accounting
“se es ee een
“she eee ee
. Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Doris R. MALLIN
Editorially Speaking:
It’s Our Little
Theatre, Too
Little Theatre of Wilkes-Barre is keeping its nose
above water by herculean efforts.
Upon several occasions
during the past forty years, the Little Theatre has been
on the verge of being swept away, but has been rescued,
and has been saved by artificial respiration.
It is the oldest such group in the country which has
been operating continuously,
and the third chartered.
One thing which has served as a stranglehold, and
one which could be eliminated,
is the amusement tax,
which was never intended to work a hardship on a com-
munity enterprise.
Out of every dollar taken in at the box office, Little
_ Theatre has to give ten cents for amusement tax.
The Chamber of Commerce realizes the cultural value
of the Little Theatre, enlarging upon in brochures of the
community.
Somebody, perhaps the Chamber of Commerce, should
carry the ball to get abatement of the amusement tax.
Little Theatre, like any other cultural project, sails
always very close to the wind.
3 That tax, ten cents on every dollar, could well mean
the difference between life and death of a truly remark-
_ able institution, one which reflects credit upon the Back
Mountain as well as the Valley.
Many of our people are active in Little Theatre, either
as members of the cast, or serving on the directorate and
on committees.
How about it, Joe? You've made every effort in the
past to put the Little Theatre on its feet; including trips
to Harrisburg to protest the
amusement tax.
How about an all-out effort again, to help get that
tax abated?
Joe Who?
Joe MacVeigh, of course.
Deborah Rogers Heads
Frances Slocum Group
Members of the Frances Slocum
Society, Children of the American
Revolution enjoyed their amnual
of Dr. and Mrs. Carlton Davies at
Mehoopany. The some-what brisk
weather didn’t daunt a number of
youngsters who went swimming in
the nearby mountain stream.
President Patricia Rogers read
the slate of candidates selected by
the nominating committee, Penny
Parkhurst, Jeffie Flack, amd Linda
Deborah Rogers was elected
president; Helen Mcllellan vice
president; Penny Parkhurst treas-
urer; Jeffie Flack secretary; Lewis
Rogers historian; Nancy Coleman
chaplain; and James Rosenbluth
registrar.
Mrs. Robert Rosenbluth emumer-
ated the soclety’s successes of the
last year and the new president
outlined a program of advancement
for the coming year.
A staff was picked for the new
society newssteet, Frances Slocum’s
Diary, with Nancy Coleman as As-
sistant Editor and Susan Rogers as
Circulation Editor to work under
President-Editor Debby Rogers.
Members attending were Patricia,
Debby, and Susan Rogers, Lewis
Rogers IV, Linda and Diane Davies,
Nancy Coleman, Frank Weiss, Helen
Mcllellan , Jeffie Flack, and Jim
Rosenbluth, Mrs. Robert Rosen-
was aided by Mrs. Lewis L. Rogers
IIT and Mrs. Davies, all members of
the Wyoming Valley Chapter DAR
which sponsors the Frances Slocum |
Society.
Receives Scholarship
RONALD L. FITZER
Recipient of an Athletic Scholar-
ship to King’s College is Ronald Lee
Fitzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Fitzer, 65 Staub Road, Trucksville.
A June graduate of Kingston
High School, Ronald was a member
of the Football team, Senior Class
Executive Council, Letterman’s
Club, Key Club, Pi Delta and Gridi-
ron Clubs, He was voted “Mr.
Kingston High” and also selected
to play in the Unico All Star
Game Friday evening.
The Fitzers formerly lived on
Harris Hill Road.
For Beautiful,
PRINTING
Try The Post
A
CRN
Ee A Aw]
Ale x .
of ll
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty. Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
It Happened
30 Years Ago
Noxen Tannery employees formed
a union to plump for more wages,
fewer hours, and more men. Rumors
of a strike were unfounded.
Henry Disque, Dallas, was ap-
pointed to inspect places selling 3.2
percent beer. (Remember prohibi-
tion ?)
Water Company was again on
the pan because of complaints of
Trucksville residents.
The new Kingston Township Vet-
erans Association planned a big
clambake to which vets of World
War I and the Spanish American
War were invited. :
Dr. Carl Hontz, Sweet Valley,
having passed his State Boards: in
Dentistry, was interning at the Fifth
Avenue Hospital in: New York.
Arthur Lee, pressman for the
Dallas Post, recalled events nineteen
years earlier when he was in Man-
chester at the time England meobil-
ized for the First World War. Ap-
prentice in a printshop, he was
among the first to volunteer.
Kingston Township and Dallas
‘| Borough agreed that thoughts: of
consolidating were premature.
The area adopted President
Roosevelt’s NRA blue eagle.
Katherine Yeisley was married to
Earl VanCampen.
Pap Hilbert, 83, was feted by his
friends at Beaumont.
Macaroni was four pounds for two
bits, sugar 10 pounds for 49 cents.
Delinquent taxpayers in the Bor-
ough were warned to pay up or else.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
A Trucksville man flying with the
Canadian Air Force, was reported
missing in action. Fred Westerman
was on a bombing expedition over
Germany.
Dean Shaver, drilling a deep well
in Beaumont om the Clarence Hil-
bert property, struck an artesian
flow of 750 gallons an hour. Clar=
ence cancelled his order for a deep
well pump, was delighted that he no
longer had to carry water for his
hatchery.
Three big barns im Wyoming
County were burned to the ground
during a severe electric storm.
Losers were Burns Sheldon, Donald
Williams, and Herbert Place. Barns,
widely separated, were struck with-
in a few minutes of each other.
Nine of Col. Kirkendall’s bomber
crew were killed during a span of
thirteen months,
Trucksville Community Associa-
tion took as its first project estab-
lishment of a small park around the
Homor Roll. Donating grading serv-
ices were Ben Banks and Mathers.
President was Dr. G. L. Howell.
Rev. Roswell Lyon resigned his
pastorate at Shavertown Methodist:
In the Outpost: Jack Reese, Max-
well Field; L. J. Spaciano, Camp Ed-
wards; Al Swelgin, Texas; Lloyd
Garinger, Fort Eustis; H. V. Lybe,
Shreveport; Dorothy King, Gulfport;
Thelma Gregory, Maryland; George
Swan, North Africa.
Alice Eipper was wed to Leslie H.
Tinsley.
Fred Eck published a long letter
to boys from Shavertown in the
service, 3
Pillar to Post was written, by re-
mote control by a young Air Force
lieutenant om his way through mid-
night skies to the Far East, where
he would fly a P-40 over Burma.
Warren Hicks had worked summers
on the Post,
The engagement of Eleanor Jane
Duncklee to Lt. Robert Fleming was
amnounced.
It Happened
{0 Years Ago
Dallas Borough - Kingston Town-
i ship school board discussed advan-
tages of a larger jointure with sur-
rounding school systems. Present
| housing was seen adequate for five
| years to come.
Polio took the life of a former
Dallas boy, Nicholas C. Durand, sec-
ond victim of the season.
Water situation steaming up
again. Bernard Bush advised on
forming of an Authority.
Norti Berti and Jim Besecker ad-
ministered oxygen to a visitor at a
{ funeral parlor.
| John Sheehan was elected to
| finish the term of Harris Haycox
| on Borough Council,
Residents were warned that
house to house delivery of mail
would not be made unless proper
boxes were installed.
Died: Mrs. Ethel M. Harlos, 74,
Lehman. Mrs. M. A. Wilcox, 84,
former resident. Jack E. Roberts,
Dallas. Mrs. Ruth B. Sutton, form-
er Dallas resident.
Married: Bobby Lee Crews to
Russell DeRemer. Dolores Adam-
shick ‘to Rudolf Ruiz.
Ramona Lugar Wins
Ramona Ann Lugar, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew: Lugar, Car-
verton, was adjudged the most
charming girl in a recent contest
held at Lazarus Portrait Studio,
and has a transistor radio from Jim
Ward at WBAX to prove it.
Ramona- has two
Ann and Mary Barbara, also stu-
dents at Gate of Heaven, and a
brother Andrew at Dallas’ High
School.
sisters, Elaine:
; THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST. 8, 1963
By The Oldtimer
It is generally agreed and offi-
cially stated that there is a surplus
of milk. It is likewise pretty gen-
erally accepted that the surplus has
the effect of reducing the unit price
and’ therefore the income of dairy
farmers. There seems to be a sur-
plus of distributors also.
The consumers price of milk is
regulated somewhat by what the
traffic will bear. It is high, maybe
too high, now. Therefore the pros-
perity of the distributors, unless
they reduce expenses somewhere
else, must be at the expense of the
farmers, While ‘this is denied by
the distributors and some profes-
sional economists, the farmers, who
sustain the squeeze of increasing
production costs and falling income,
are forced by hard facts to continu-
ally increase efficiency or go out of
business. Many times the expense
for machinery, etc., to stay in busi-
ness at all, is extremely burden-
some.
All figures hereinafter are for the
whole country, on am average basis,
furnished by’ the U.S. Department
of Agriculture, unless otherwise
stated. Since milk is handled by
the pound until it is placed im fluid
containers, and dairy products are
from milk bought by the pound,
equivalents are used as follows: 1
qt. is paid for as 2.18 lbs.; in butter,
cheese, ete., the equivalent quantity
of milk required is estimated per
pound of finished product. In any
certain area, actual prices may be
more or less.
In 1922, retail price of milk was
12.6 cents, the farmer got 5.3 cents,
the middlemen 7.3 cents. The farm-
er’'s share of the retail price was
42%. In the depression year of
1933, retail price was 9.8 cents,
farmer’s share 3.7 cents, middle-
men's share 6.1 cents, farmers share
38%, lowest since 1922.
In the highest priced year on
record, 1952 for farmers, the farm-
er received 11.9 cents, but the retail
price jumped to 23.2 cents, giving
the middleman 11.3 cents. The
farmer for a year or two got 51%
of the retail price. This has dropped
right along ever since. In 1960 the
farmer got 10.9 cemts out of a retail
Rambling Around
— D. A. Waters
price of 25.3 cents or 43%, leaving
14.4 cents or 57% for the middle-
men. All these figures are subject
to slight revisions for 1943-1946 in
which certain price supports ap-
| plied. Using price support figures
the farmer got 50% to 59% in some
of those years, Also in 1947-48, no
supports, the farmer got 54%, with
prices 10.3 to 11.3 cents out of re-
tail prices of 19.0 cents and 21.1
cents.
For the equivalent of a pound of
butter the farmer got 43.8 cents in
1919 out of a retail price of 68.8
cents, middleman’s share 25 cents,
farmer’s percentage 64%. Except-
ing for the depression years of 1932
was 53%, most of the time it ran
in the 60% class up to World War
II. Then it jumped to 71% to,84%.
Estimating price supports for those
years it ran from 80% to 101%. In
1960 the farmer received 53.1 cents
out of a retail price of 74.9 cemts or
71%, middleman’s share 21.8 cents.
For milk equivalent of a pound of
American : cheese selling at 21.6
cents in 1913, the farmer got 13.4
cents or 62%. In 1932 retail price
was 22.6 but the farmer got only
8.5 cemts, or 38%. The middleman
got 14.1 cents or 62%. The burden
of ‘the depression in the cheese fell
entirely on the farmer, or almost: so.
Again in World War II the farmer’s
share jumped to 60% to 67% with-
out supports, estimated with sup-
ports as 69% to 81%. In 1960, the
farmer received 29.6 cents or 49%
of retail price 60.6 cents.
For evaporated cammed milk, the
farmer received 35% of the retail
price in 1922, which dropped to
28% during the depression, rose to
55% to 61% during World War II,
plus a few cents extra supports, and
then dropped ever since. In 1960
the farmer got 6.3 cents out of a
retail price of 15.7 cents or 40%,
middleman’s share 9.4 cents or
60%.
Now after several columns setting
the ground work, we are next time
going to tackle the hard problem,
“Why does the farmer receive so
little, and the middleman so
much ?”
Mrs. Sheldon Mosier, mother
of Dale Mosier, one of the for-
eign exchange students now
touring Europe after finishing
a year’s schooling in the
Netherlands, shares with Dal-
las Post readers some, of: his
letters:
I stayed with John ‘Parry’s
Rotary family in Amsterdam until
early Tuesday morning. Their boy
is at the present time in Strouds-
burg with the Rotary program. I
gaw my first game of Cricket while!
here. It is a real English gentle-
man’s game, starting at 11:00 A.M,
stopping for lunch and tea before
finishing at 6:00 P.M. and beginning
again the next day if it isn't
emded. The Dutch have a lot of
sports from many countries, even
American baseball.
We left Amsterdam at 7:30 A.M.
and went to Bonn where we stayed
with’ the Prittwitzes for one day.
We had not planned om staying
there, but we stopped in Bonn with
the intention of maybe seeing
President Kennedy but he had al-
ready left. I called up Mrs. Pritt-
witz to say hello and she insisted
that we come over for lunch. (You
remember I spent Christmas vaca-
tion with this family.) We stayed
there that night and then left for
St. Goarshauren the next day.
It is a beautiful village that lies
in a narrow valley between moun-
tains and the broad Rhine River.
‘We visited one of the famous Rhine
castles, ‘Rhinfels”. It was really
exciting to’ go through it. It was
wonderful the way the castle was
carved out of stone in the side cliff
overlooking the village. It took us
about 17, hours to go through the
place and we still didn’t see it all.
It was a real castle and hadn’t been
restored in any modern manner.
There were many secret ways, but.
as we had no light with us.
The boat trip on the Rhine was
fantastic. The Rhine is very broad
and flows through the mountains
with many castles on the tops and
then the sides are covered with
vineyards. The whole scene gives
ome a very unique and wonderful
effect. I have never seen such a
scene before.
We got off the boat at Mainz,
took the train to the Youth Hostel
and dragged our bags up a steep
hill to get there, only to find that
there: was no room. We carried our
suitcases down again and took the
streetcar amd bus to Wiesbaden,
finding accomodations in the Youth
Hostel. We were tired by this time
so we went right to bed at 10: P.M.
We got up at 7:30 the next morn-
ing and ate our breakfast. Wow!
what a breakfast — 2 rolls; a piece
of bread and a large cup of coffee-
like liquid. The overnight stay and
breakfast cost 65c.
The mext day we took the train
to Heidelberg. It was a beautiful
city with an ideal location along a
river at the ‘foot of a sharply
ascending mountain. On ‘the top of
the mountain overlooking the! city
was a beautiful castle. It is sup-
posed to be one of the most beauti-
ful im Germany and I believe it.
we had to stumble our way through |.
‘We didn’t begin’ to get around the | |b
Dale Mosier And John Parry Visit
Historic Castles Along The Rhine
we spent there. It was more like
a palace than a fortress like the
one we saw on the Rhine. We saw
a large wine cask which held about
50,000 gallons. It was so large that
there was a small dance floor on
top of it, We ate in a cheap
restaurant and had a real good
meal for 75¢c. We got a nice room
at the hotel for $1.60.
That night we went to the Hof-
Brau house. The atmosphere: is
great. They have a band for sing-
ing and dancing sometimes, but
usually they play the German
drinking songs or conversation
music. There is nothing like this in
the states. We met a lot of Amer-
icans there. No wonder they call
Heidelberg “Little America”. It
was fumny going around talking to
everyone. This is the first time
we had seen so many Americans
and we made a lot of friends.
The next day we went to Frei-
burg in the Black Forest where we
joined a friend of mine who studies
there at the University. He showed:
us the town and then introduced us
to some friends with whom we
went out for the evening and got
1 back at 10 just as the Youth Hostel
attendant was ‘closing the doors.
The mext day we went hiking 10-12
miles, maybe more in the Black
Forest. It is a maze of mountains
and valleys with real woods but
very clean and well kept. After
that we left for Munich.
( to be continued)
Condition Improved
Friends of Harvey Bottoms will
be pleased to know that he is im-
proving and is now at his home,
on, when the farmer's percentage!
Better Leighton Never
by Leighton Seott
HAVING A HIGH TIME
What would you do if, standing
on Main ‘Street; you were suddenly
overcome by a strong urge to, know
just how many feet above sea level.
you: were presently ?
I bet you've trod on: the amswer
a hundred times without noticing it.
Imbedded in the vestibule floor
of the bank is a Coast Guard bench-
mark which says 1127.531 feet.
Other questions that immediately
pop up: How many feet below sky-
level am I presently? And why?
I poimted the mark out recently
to the mayor, who happened along,
and he hadn’t noticed it before
either.
Do not get a false impression.
Although the marker is 1127.531
above sea-level, the chances are
your perception of the object takes
arrest at around 1133 feet, if you
are of average height.
Also, you do not necessarily live
at that many feet above sea-level
if you don’t live in the bank, which
I think is probably the’ case.
The mayor remarked . that he
lives at a higher elevation, being on
Pioneer Avenue.
to that. /
The 64 dollar question is: where!s
the lowest point in Dallas? To find
out, I'm going to pour a bucket of
water in front of the bank in the
mear future; to see which way it
runs. Where it stops we'll put an-
other marker.
BACK PITTSTON
I never took a hankering to base-
ball until Little League captured
my fancy, namely last year with
Back Mountain’s terrific season.
Before that I was convinced (al-
though a onetime letterman in
several sports — don’t laugh) that
baseball was a tired game.
This year both Back Mountain
and Bob Horlacher All-Stars lost
out in the sectional eliminations,
but that’s no reason for us to stop
cheering. Our neighbors are still
in the running today.
I remember last year at Wil-
liamsport, among all the Back
Mountain boosters’ signs, one which
stayed with me as a nice tribute
from a bunch of zany good-sports:
“Pittston Boozers
Mountain All-Stars.”
Wherever you are, boys, and no
matter how the kids make out at
the State finals at Latrobe today
and henceforth, we only wish Lin-
coln’s immortal sentiment prevails,
and the War Department sends you
a case of the same and —uh, soda
for your little friends.
Hopfer ‘Schultz
Families Meet
Back Back ]
There's something |.
Hopfer and. Shultz 9th Reunion
was held July 28, 1963 at Benton
Park. A piommic lunch was en-
joyed and business meeting pre-
sided over by president, William
Shultz. Gifts were awarded. :
Attending were: Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Hopfer and family, Mr. and
Mrs. William Long and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Hopfer and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burkland and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hartzel:
and family, Pamela and Charles
Rambo, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hartzel,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hartzel and
family, Mrs. Richard Vought and
gon; Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Billie
Shultz and family,
Mrs. Eva Cartwright and son
John, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hopfer
and family, Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Ickes, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shultz,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Traver, Mr.
and ‘Mrs; Emory Traver and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Conner,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ridall, Mr. and
Mrs. William Mowery, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Ridall and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Kitchen and family,
Mr. and Mrs. James Hetteshimer
and family. Charlotte Patton; Pat
Andy, Chuck and Joe Hovery were
visitors.
To Enter Hospital
Mrs, Willard Puterbaugh, Mt.
Airy Road, Shavertown, will enter
Nesbitt Hospital tomorrow for
treatment of a leg injury suffered
636 Centre Street, Trenton, N. J.
two years ago.
VV TV VV Vv VY VV vv OU Yvv eV
CLOSE-QUT
VV VV VV VV VV OVI VY VY Vevey
SUMMER WEIGHT —!
DACRON BLENDS
Values to $16.95
BUDD
whole thing on the afternoon that |}
sin st.
SPORT SHIRTS
POLO SHIRTS
1 59
Luzerne
S&H
GREEN
ES
STAMPS
Tosi ia SS
NC
HHT FO MA MHC HIRE CTA, 1
CECE ces ng
. | ___ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From —
Pillar To Post...
Who ever could have guessed that it would one day be a col-
lector’s item? mg :
The antique cars trundle along the highway, pausing now and
again: to let the perspring driver pour a bucket ‘of water into a
steaming radiator, holding up traffic and engendering a nostalgic
gleam in the eye of anybody who drove a car beforel the 1920s.
I keep wondering what happened to the 1902 Cadillac that
Papa used to drive on his professional rounds in Baltimore before
he abandoned the pursuit of status for the pursuit of efficiency, and
switched back to horses, which could be depended upon not to get
flat tires or shed the drive chain.
Two horses, one for morning, one for afternoon, hitched to the
sober: black buggy with its leather storm curtain for rainy days and
its hot brick for winter; covered the area much more effectively than
one of those new-fangled contraptions which everybody agreed would
never replace the horse.
And the buggy was a much more comfortable mode of locomo-
tion in bad weather. Those first cars seldom hoasted such frills
as tops.
The one-lung engine was under the seat, with driver and pas-
senger frying in hot weather. The radiator looked like a waffle
smacked’ flat to, a’ dashboard, and gear shift levers, brake, and bulb
horn were on the outside, handy to the driver, who sat at the right.
No doors. You just hung on and hoped for the best.
And of course no windshield, 'and in those first cars no lights, .
though later models sported an acetylene tank and twin brass head-
lights, which had a way of flickering out and leaving/the motorist
in his duster and goggles to grope his way home in the dark at ten
miles an hour.
Access to the rear seat was by a little door and a steep step. Once
aboard. two. passengers could enjoy the luxury of corner seats up-
holstered ‘in black leather. If a third passenger must be accommo=
dated, a beard could be slipped across between the two corner seats.
There was always the delightful uncertainty about the condition of
the door latch. Would it hold, or would the third man go catapult-
ing off into space? The thirdman got a good grip on the shiny! y
brass rails surrounding the tonneau, and prayed as he jounced.
It attracted a lot of attention, advertising itself liberally as it dé
came chug-chugging up the street. When it stopped before a pa-
tient’s home, and the doctor disappeared within, carrying his little
black bag, urchins swarmed over it, leaving eager fingerprints on
the brass rails; tooting the horn, and yelling “Get a horse,” when
dislodged.
They. always retired to a respectful distance when Papa swung
the crank and the motor sprung into life.
Who knew ?
They wanted to be around if it happened, but they maintained
a safe distance.
It might blow up.
That 1902 Cadillac would probably bring a pretty penny these
days, much -more than it set Papa back when only slightly second-
hand.
INCORPORATED
PHOTO-ENGRAVING
Offset Negatives and Platemaking
Screen Prints, Art Work
Phone VA 5-2978
29 North Main Street 4 Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Rear
DRYCLEANED
THIS SUIT? |
Bet they used
‘Sanitone’s
Style-Set*finish”
He's right. We did!
Ao
pi
APPROVED
SERVICE
—
¢ with any
drycleaning
order
~ FREE pick up and delivery
288-1496 Enterprise 1-0843
| a PLANT and NARROWS SHOPPING
8 CENTER BRANCH STORE
O'Malia’s
~ Laundry & Dry Cleaning
os buzeme-Dallas Highway ~~ ; ;
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