dil From— Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post 30 Years Ago A bomber, forced down on North Mountain in a blinding snowstorm, was able to take off again the fol- lowing day for its base at Langley Field. The Keystone plane landed near Lopez, and was immediately mired in soggy ground. Dallas Township school directors voted to pay off a long-term obli- gation of $6,500. Dallas Borough named Jack Ro- { berts as basketball manager, assur- ing the admission to the Rural League. Prospects for ‘the team in- cluded Red Carey, Ted Woolbert, Bob Marshall, Dick Templin, Dick Pillar To Post... By Hix This is the second time that Hix has seen a flag flying at half- staff following assassination of a President of the United States. The first was in 1901, when President William McKinley was killed while shaking hands with a spectator at the World's Fair in Buffalo. In those days there was no radio, no television. Telegraphed reports brought forth a spate of people in rural districts did not hear the news for days. were in their infancy, confined in the main to cities. “Extras” on city streets. Many Telephones Distances were too great for stringing of telephone wires in the less populated areas. People got their news when they drove to town for groceries or to pick up the mail once a week. For many, the news of the assasination of President McKinley was received at the same time as the news of his death eight days later. The news of the kidnapping of the Lindbergh bein came over the radio, over thirty years ago. The country waited hopefully. Surely the baby would be returned unharmed. Whistles blew, the country stopped in its tracks, when the hor- rifying news was broadcast that little Charles Augustus Lingbergh had been found dead in a wooded area not far from the home in Ne Jersey from which he had been kidnapped. Dead since the moment after he had been lifted from his crib. Radio and newspapers carried the details. The incredible news of Pearl Harbor, December 2, 1941, stunned the country. People who were tuned in on their favorite Sunday programs heard the radio stuttering the announcement. It must be a giant hoax. Grasping at straws, people remembered that radio listeners had left New York in panic just a short time ago when a broadcast of a purely fictional landing of Men from Mars, had carried with it the ring of incredible truth. They would not be so easily caught again. It must be a publicity sunt. Not until days later did they learn the true extent of the dis- aster which touched off the participation of the United States in World War II. Television with its world-wide network was still far in the future. Who could guess that even as world-shaking events occurred, the news would be flashed on a screen to every household in the land? That weary news commentators would remain at their posts all night on Black Friday, November 22, 1963, relaying information to a grief-stricken country, spreading the news of the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy at the height of his youthful strength ? The funeral train of President Abraham Lincoln was immortal- ized in pictures, as it crept through the country-side, met by sorrow- ing groups of people, huddled in the rain alongside the tracks in the middle of the night. The sad ceremonies following the death of President Kennedy are recorded on film, a heritage for posterity. A monument to a fanatic, a lone wolf, eaten by hate, living only for the opportunity to kill. A fanatic who appeared over television, imperturbable, a chosen instrument of destruction. Shavertown The State will take a portion of the rear of Milt Whiting’s property in a plan to widen Roushey Street and allow access to W. Center Street across the former base of the Bucan lot without entering the highway. Shavertown Cub Scout Pack 233 is selling fruit cakes and assorted nuts for the holidays. Place your order with any of the members to help bolster their needed funds. Mr. and Mrs. William Langley will leave this week to spend the holiday with their son and family in Jenkintown. Mr. family, Dallas, and Mr. and Mrs. W. Dean Johnson and family, Trucks- ville, will have Thanksgiving dinner at the home of their mother, Mrs. Ruth Houser. Jimmie Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Morgan, Jr., student at Mansfield State, will spend hol- iday recess with his parents. Al home for the Thanksgiving leave will be Jay Ferguson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. D. Ferguson. Jay is a freshman at Lycoming Col- lege. Mrs. Thomas Neuman, Reading, is ill at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ell, Jr., Lehigh Street. Fred Lancaster, W. Franklin Street, underwent surgery at Gener- - al Hospital on Wednesday. Pvt. Dana Campbell, son of Mr. and Mrs, Dana Campbell, Mt. Airy Road, Shavertown, arrived home from Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, Saturday, to spend e 14 day leave with his parents. and Mrs. Elton Brace and : Receive Awards Shavertown Cub Scout Pack 233 received awards at a meeting of members, parents and friends held last week. Bob cat pins were presented to Jimmy Robinson, Charles Glenn, James Glenn; Lion badges, John Horowitz, Donald Voelker, Jimmy Roman, Bobby Youngblood. One year pins, Billy Youngblood, Alan Shaver, Rickard Yeust; Denner’s Stripe, Jeff Allen, Alan Shaver, Warren Boyes, Rickard Yeust, Wal- ter Karl, Ricky Thier, Assistant Denner’s Stripe. Wolf Badge, Peter Swain, Andy Roan . David Voelker, Mark and James Groblewski, Jeffrey Boyes; Bear Books, Peter Swain, Jeff Allen, Andy Roan, Mark and James Gro- blewski: Wolf Book, Jimmy Mec- Gough; Gold Arrows, Peter Swain, Andy Roan, David and Donald Voelker, Ricky Thier, Warren Boyes; Silver Arrow, Peter Swain. Cubmaster Edwin Stolarick pre- sided and Clayton Klaboe, chairman, introduced assistant cub master, Andy Gallagher. A den mother for Den 3 is needed. + Den 5 under direction of Mary Shaver, den mother, presented a skit, “The World Of Sound” and Den 7, under direction of Margaret Boyes presented, “Fire Prevention.” Auxiliary president, Eleanor Fred- erick announced cubs began the sale of fruit cakes and assorted nuts, November 11. Opening ceremonies were Pper- formed by Den 1 under direction of Margaret Porter. Closing with silent prayer was supervised by. Johnson, Ad Wioolbert, J. Perrego, J. Price, Scott VanHorn, Irwin Cool- baugh, Kenneth Disque, and J. Rusilogki. A Lake cottage was pinpointed by detectives as the meeting place of a gang of check-forgers. ' Willard = Shortz, representative from Fifth District of which Dallas was a part, approved Governor Pin- chot’s plan to regulate the liquor traffic upon repeal of prohibition. Tax-payers in Pennsylvania cities were protesting Pinchot’s proposal to add 53,000 miles of secondary road to the State highway system. Fine for the farmers, they claimed, hut tough on the urban population which has to foot ‘the bill without getting too great benefit from it. Angelo Hewitt, 75, died at his home in Trucksville, 20 Years Ago A Back Mountain boy who was tenth to land on a beach-head in Sicily, was wounded in action. El- mer Lamoreaux was one of those who captured 400 Germans, minus their pants. History, as given in his V-mail letter, does not state whet- her replacements were provided. Draft boards were calling up ma- ny young fathers. One man in every ten in Noxen wag in service, one of the highest percentages in the country. Grover Anderson Jr. and Jack Nothoff got a 150 pound bear near Wellsboro. They reported that a cripple, trudging along the road with a cane and a gun, encountered a 400 pound bear and killed it, enough meat for the winter. A mammoth scrap drive was set for Pearl Harbor Day, with all schools and communities planning to participate. The railroads were doing a mag- nificent job of moving traffic and materiel. Heard from in the Outpost: Ber- nard Jones, Atlantic Fleet; Don Ro- berts, Tinker Field; Benjamin Jones, Over There; Howard R. Die- ter, Illinois; Earl Fogle, Naval Hos- pital, Oaklan; Mrs. Edison L. Hen- ish, Jacksonville; Bill Carroll, Chi- cago Donald Yeust, Camp Hood; Bill Price, South Pacific; Sterling Achuff, Fort Eustis; Thomas Beline, Norfolk; Elmer Wyant, Fort Bliss; Ted Schwartz, Norfolk; Florence Rupiloski, Arkansas; William Rhodes South Carolina; Bob Roberts, Bland- ing Field; Albert Crispell, Camp Da- vis; Francis Sidorek, Alabama; Odell Henson, Rhode Island; Harold May- er, Utah. 10 Years Ago It was the famous Brown Issue, 68 pages of local history collected over a six month period, the issue postponed again and again because the undertaking was. such a colos- sal job and took so much time. It was a beautiful issue, with loads of pictures and much feature story material. The new Ross Township school was preparing to open, six one- room schools to close forever. It was Thanksgiving issue, short on news, long on atmosphere. Polly Lou Cooper was married to Jay Vandenhout; Cora Rood to Mar- ion Porter. Mr. and Mrs. Arch Woolbert observ- ed their Golden Wedding. REQUIEM FOR A PRESIDENT November winds blow bleak and cold In Arlington. A somber sky looks down— Then comes a muffled cadence, Rolling drums, slow marching feet, Wind-borne from the town. The solemn words are spoken, Then—a bugle keens Its thin, far motes of sad release, And in the pulsing silence, Where little winds moan soft lament, A martyred hero 1e8tSemm At last in peace! America, America, Rise to your destiny! Pick up the torch of Freedom Tossed from his falling hands, “Be yours to hold it high.” And here with high resolve declare ; Its light shall mever die! Myrtle Karl, Den 2. —WILLARD G. SEAMAN {much of .| cannot afford to pay a man $14,000 THE DALLAS POST, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1963 Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters The Farrar forces during the re- cent campaign, in one way or an- other, put out a lot of figures and financial conclusions. Some stated as ‘‘this year” were in fact taken from Pennsylvania Economy League figures for 1960—61. That year lo- cally was a year of transition. We moved into the New building during that term, not at the start. Right away, prior figures for heat, water, light and power, janitor service, ect., were exceeded. Expense per pupil in 1960-61 is of mo use now, as it jumped $45 or $50 the very next year. Dr. Jordan defends the $14, 000 pay for Dr. Mellman on the ground that he also serves as business man- ager. This is about the poorest thing he could have thought of. Only about six years ago, an admin- istrator in the southeastern part of the state got away with a couple of hundred thousand dollars of ‘school money, because the financial affairs were handled in his office. No corporation spending $1,200,000 a year would try to operate with- out a purchasing agent and busi- ness manager, or both: They might give him another name such as comptroller or general auditor, or financial vice-president or some- thing, .but the job or jobs would be there and the work performed, independent of ole man dictation. This casts no reflection or ques- tion about the integrity of Dr. Mell- man. Tt is a business proposition. The work must be done here, and I can testify from fifteen years ex- perience in a very small district that there ¥& a lot of such work, it office. work. Now we to do office work, and if we did, his administrative and supervisory duties would be neglected. What is happening is that we are giving the work to clerks, ‘teachers, etc. having nop respongibility, and taking them from their regular duties. Dr. Mellman included in the current budget an item of $2,650 for ‘“nec- essary part-time service of a qual- ified school business assistant.” What we need is a full-time man, qualified and responsible. Obviously more pupils will in- crease expenses. The acceptable fi- nancial standard for comparing one year with another, or one school with others, is the total cost per pupil. But to be fair, and mean anything, ‘this must be accurately computed from final exact figures. Guess work, calculated or otherwise, means nothing. In a booklet pub- lished by the administration in May 1963, there appears in capital let- ters, “THE AVERAGE PER PUPIL EXPENDITURE IN THE UNITED STATES, FOR THIS SCHOOL YEAR, IS $547.” This is under a notation regarding the Pennsylvania Econo- my League, but the Economy Lea- gue completely disavows this figure. They say they have never issued ‘dependable, this, or any other figure, under this category. Certainly no one can compute an average per pupil expenditure for the current year, until all final fig- ures are in. And to do it properly for the entire U. S. would take a lot more people than we have in our schools. The most repeated argument, widely believed by young married people, is that all this addition to schools, year after year, is neces- sery in order that their children may enter college. This is without foundation. Students from all the small schools, before we had re- Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott MY TWO CENTS About the only thing I can add to the volumes written and spoken in praise of the late President Ken- nedy is this: Before a young Sena- tor from Massachusetts captured a majority vote of the people of the USA on gheer personal appeal, the man in Washington most feared and respected was a big, tough, cagey political critter from Texas who knew how to run more good railroads than Grand Central Sta- tion, All of a sudden, there was the Harvard boy and the economic ad- visors and TV and the bureaucracy — and politigs cut about as much ice as a flag-pole sitting trophy. organization, entered college, even |The same with ‘the most powerful prestige colleges. went from Dallas Borough to Har- vard. If a young mother wants her son to attend college, she should not be running around pressuring the school board to spend more money. The school does not go to college, it is ‘the student. She should be sure he takes adequate courses of the right kind for his prospective field, and see to it that he does his homework, year after year, to stand well in his class. Failing stu- dents, almost always, blame their schools instead of themselves. The total school time per week is limited. Certain basic subjects are required of all students, The state makes strict standards of time re- quired in various subjects. No stu- dent, however bright, is permitted to dip around a few minutes of this and a few minutes of that. Having a dozen different , subjects taught simultaneously benefits no single individual. He can take only one at a ‘time. And some subjects are required to be taken in se- quence for purpose of order, also of quality. A single year in each of six languages is not as acceptable as two years or more in the same language. It is likened to dining out in a restaurant. The diner has available a dozen dinners, but his capacity limits him to one. A smaller place may offer only three or four, but he usually can find one that will do. Now of course, a really big place may have beautifully decorated surroundings with better looking waitresses in nicer uniforms, flow- ers on the table, big dinner napkins instead of small or even paper ones, mugic, or even a floor show. These are pleasant, but the diner can get a good meal without them. "Of our high spending, how much goes to put flowers on the’ table? In spite of the fact that the propa- ganda figures were so obviously un- it is reasonably pogss- ible that accurate figures would not compare too unfavorably with those for other schools. Free spending is common, and dollars are worth only thirty to forty cents today, com- pared to pre-New Deal values. Nancy Drapiewski Is Honored At Penn State Nancy H. Drapiewski, Sweet Val- ley was among the students honored at the 11th Annual Awards Banquet sponsored by the Student-Faculty Board of the College of Home Eco- nomics at Pennsylvania State, Uni- versity Park. Nancy ranks second in her class at the beginning of her senior year with a cumulative of 3.74 out of a possible 4.0. She was recently initiated into Omicron Nu, an honor sorority, which has as its members high- ranking home economics sehiors. Requiem Mass For Harry G. Ostrum A Mass of Requiem will be cele- brated tomorrow morning at Gate of Heaven Church for Harry Gabel Ostrum, Chase, who died at Cres- son State Hospital on Sunday. Friends may call tonight at the Bronson Funeral Home. Mr. Ostrum, 36, had been a pa- tient at Cresson for ten months, submitting to surgery. For many years he had made his home with an aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Gabel, at Chase. As a boy he was a student at St. Michael's Industrial School. He was employed at Franconi Auto Parts. He leaves four half brothers: Rob- ert, Richard, George Lang, all of Union,” N, J., and William Lang, Georgia. Services Tomorrow For Mrs. Bmna Hoover Mrs. C. Anna Hoover, 87, for the past four years a guest at Carpenter Nursing Home, died Sunday morn- ing.’ She will be buried Wednes- day afternoon at Maple Grove, fol- lowing services conducted by Rev. William Hughes and Rev. B. Kirby Jones from the Bronson Funeral Home. Friends may call this eve- ning. Mrs. Hoover, a mative of Moore- town, daughter of the late Alonzo and Martha Post Davenport, lived in Duryea for a number of years after her marriage. She and her husband Harry, who died in 1945, moved back to this area in 1926, when they settled in iSweet Valley. When Mrs. Hoover could no longer manage her own household and re- tired to a nursing home, her daughter, Mary and her husband Ralph Naugle, took over the family home, remodelling it somewhat. In addition to her daughter, nieces and nephews survive. Only seven girls were invited to join Omicron Nu in the fall of 1963. Nancy is a graduate of the Lake- Lehman High School. She was val- edictorian of her class and was the Senior Girl of the Year of Luzerne County. During the past summer, she was a boating counselor at the Devereux Institute Camp in North Anson, Maine. Sets Milk Record Hillside V Rag Apple Jebbie 4457883, a five year old owned by Hillside Farms, Inc, Trucksville, produced 18,923 lbs. milk and 619 Ibs. butterfat in 309 days. \ CORP. 245 Charles St., Luzerne PHONE 287-1117 Robert Fleming | politician in Washington — Lyndon Johnson. Few Senators could handle the scene like Johnson, and the coun- try is lucky to still have him. IT WAS STILL PINK Our traffic light in the Borough has what is probably the shortest yellow ever devised by man, allow- ing the driver the slender choice of either slamming on his brakes and cursing loudly (my way), or silently slipping through and tell- ing Ray Titus or Charley Lamoreaux that it was still pink when you started. The short yellow wasn’t planned that way, I don’t believe, since I have seen the police on traffic duty time and time again exhibit judgt- ment and leniency. Several times I've tried to make it on the yellow and missed, flashing a painful grin at the officer around the corner, who seems to understand. The thing is, that a longer yel- low would take some of the guess- work out of it for both the driver |- and the police. While we in Dallas have learned to live with our zany traffic light, I have heard commuters from the Lake and Lehman pass severe judgement on it. THE MILL IN COLOR It was in the nick of time last week that I remembered the old Carverton Mill was being torn down for ‘the state park project, and hust- led ‘down to get a picture. Some people said: It's a pity it wasn’t in color. Which is true, except that we can’t print in color. But, consult ye good old Trading Post this week or last: Mrs. Albert Turner has col- or pix of it in two sizes. WHO'S ON FIRST bi If you had hrouble figuring out who's on first and what’s on second about this reapportionment move in, Harrisburg, you're not alone. Some of the ‘confusion may: come beacause, as Senator Flack observed to us just recently: “It’s a political thing”. Which means simply that it was tough to get your story straight because one side was Spiamistic, the other pessimistic. v The republican caucus leader in the Senate told me they'd have a final vote yesterday, and another Senator said it would be weeks, and neither was being too real- istic. Assassination (Continued from Page 1 A) great political or. international as- sassin, but to be shot down by a nothing, a NOTHING.” When Lee Oswald was announced dead, most felt less injustice than frustration: “Now we'll never know.” “He’s no good dead.” Flags on local postoffices and American Legion posts will be at half mast for thirty days from that ill-fated Friday. A Call Today Will Keep Ol'Man Winter Away? Tow lo the time to let us get between you and the chills or; : {Man Winter likes to blow your way. i { We'll winter-proof your home with the finest heating oil there is, with the best kind of service you ever had. Because we (compete with other companies for your business, you see, wey, {must hustle to please you. Your satisfaction is our business, and’ we wouldn’t want it any other way, ~~ HOME FUEL WGBLLAEHT year; $2.50 six months. six months. Out-of-State months or less. THE DALLAS POST Established 188 Entered ‘as second-class matter at the post office at Dall Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. No subscriptions accepted for less subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.0 Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA $4. Subscription rates: Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. { ATED o Surface Processes (Continued from Page 1A) town beamed cheerfully. He and Ralph Ell, Dallas, are pilot plant operators. The reason for David's exuberance was explained . . . he had just had a new baby (by re- mote control.) Things were humming in there, a revolving cylinder mixing up what looked like a batch of pink paint. “Some of these young men are completing their education at Wilkes College. We defray costs of tuition and books, because we believe that it pays big dividends to have the best informed people possible. is is a very exacting business, where errors cost money,’ said Mrs. Hall. Consultant service is furnished for concerns all over the country. Dr. Young, president of Surface Processes, has been engaged in fuel cell research for several years, serv- ing as consultant for many govern- mental agencies as well as private industry. He received. his B.S. from Rensselaer Polytechnique Institute in 1950, his Ph.D. from Lehigh Uni- versity in 1954. He served on the staff of Lehigh University, 1954 to 1955; Mellon Institute 1955 to 1956; Pennsylvania State University 1956 to 1959, and Alfred University 1959 to 1961, before coming to Dallas. Joseph Hall Jr. a native of Staten Island, was discharged from the Navy at the end of World War II. He holds an AB in chemistry and a Masters degree from Middlebury College, Vermont, and subsequently took further graduate studies at Lehigh, where he was a research Associate in the National Printing Ink Institute 1950 to 1952. From 1952 to 1960, he was with the Cabot Corp. in Boston, first as researcher in the laboratories of the largest manufacturer of carbon black in the world, and later as laboratory manager. ‘When Surface Processes Corp. was formed in 1960, Mr. Hall left Bos- ton to become vice president and secretary. On the staff are four pilot plant operators: David and Ralph Ell, Dal- las area; Joseph Boback and Scott Logan, Wilkes-Barre. Robert W. Dingman, Overbrook Road, is senior chemical engineer. Alexander Bell, Norton Avenue, is research physical chemist. The two laboratory technicians, Theodore Levitsky Jr. and Joseph Lugiano, come from Pringle and Wilkes-Barre. Norma Smith, secretary, is from the Back Mountain, taking the Dal- las Post completely by surprise. And Lamar C. Dinger, mainten- ance man, used to drop around at the Dallas Post to mail out the single-wraps. It was a delightful morning, well worth taking two hours off from office the day after press day. The place is easy enough to find, once you are cued in. Drive out Lake Street to the intersection with Country Club Road. Turn right, and keep going until you see the sign on the right, very close to the Country Club. The road looks im- probable, heading into the woods, but it leads (over the ruts) to the neat little white buildings of Sur- face Processes, where the slogan ! is: Progress Starts With a Problem. Mrs. Fred Eck Thanks United Fund Workers Mrs. Fred Eck, general chairman of the United Fund Drive West Metropolitan Division, wishes to thank all who participated in the joint effort in ‘the Rack Mountain Area. Although the goal was not quite reached, $6,000 was raised in this community. : Additional volunteers whose names were unintentionally omit- ted previously are as follows: Dallas Borough — Mesdames Rus- sell Lawry, James Oliver, Ralph Fitch, George Thomas, John Gildea, Fred Templin, Robert Botsford, Kenneth Young, Carleton Davies. East Dallas — Mesdames Marsh- all U. Rumbaugh, Harry Swepston, Jr., Harold Titman, West Dallas — Mesdames H. R. McCartney, Lyman Lull, L. Verne ' Groff, Clayton Evans, John La- Berge. New Goss Manor — Mesdames J. D. Houlette, Nicholas Perella, Edward Brominski, Edward Cavan, William Wright. Old Goss Manor — Mesdames Thomas Bobo, Thomas Gauntlett, William H. Young, Mrs. Frank Townend. Huntsville — Mesdames Bradford Allden, Dana Crump, Warren Boyes, Fred Nicely, Royal Culp, Donald Fannon, Joseph Sims. Kunkle — Mesdames Lorette Nel- son, Marian Shoemaker, Carol Hil- bert, Eunice Mitchell, Vera Hoyt, Etella Birnstock, Allison Thomas. Harveys Lake — Mesdames Carl Swanson, Howard Piatt, Charles Williams ,Geogre Searfoss, Malcohm Nelson, C. Wesley Boyle, Treva Sorchik, Miss Pauline Davis. Mrs. Florence B. Ruff Services for Mrs. Florence B. Ruff, Noxen, were conducted Monday afternogn, by Rev. Wesley Kimm, pastor ‘of St. Luke’s Lutheran Church, Noxen. Burial was, at Or- cutt Cemetery, from the Nulton Fu- neral Home. Mrs. Ruff, 57, died Saturday ie morning at General Hospital where she had been admitted to the med- ical service November 2. A native of Luzerne, she had if lived in Noxen since 1930. She was ‘a member of St. Luke's and Daugh- ters of America. Surviving are her husband John W.; children, Jacqueline and John R., both at home; brothers, Wilbur H. Eustice, Luzerne; Stewart J. Eustice, Clarion; Clifford Eustice, Tunkhannock; step-brother, Edward Elston, Luzerne; sisters, Mrs. George Coolbaugh, Auburn Center, Meshop- pen and Mrs. Gordon Laycock, Cleveland, Ohio. PRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIALI Samsonite Silhouette Fitted Vanity™$ 995° Y $25.00 Elegant "set starter”packed with Christmas Wishes \ “Thoughtful” is the word for this can’t-miss gift! It’s beautifully fitted with all the accessories every traveling lady needs—comb, brush, mirror and cosmetic bottles. Compact, roomy, extravagantly lined . . . stain-resistant vinyl. Travels along breezily, because it's made with lightweight magnesium frame. And not a lock in sight! A great way to get her started on a complete matching set of Silhouette luggage. Biscayne Blue, Willow Green, Dover White, Platinum Grey, Oxford Grey. ) *k the price will go back to $25.00 January Ist, 1964 HENRY'’S JEWELRY GIFT & CARD SHOP ‘MAIN HIGHWAY, SHAVERTOWN and covered with scuff and ALL PRICES PLUS TAX The 1 Misericc to musi Area tc of Mi om b. ¥ Misericc shagyn phy; co orchest: | at Mise The Misericc Static Pvt.) and Mrs neer A ville, is Student School Andre High S in the : taking 1 He from h friends. 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