The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 18, 1964, Image 2

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1933, PL. 289, as amended.
- the
"art supplies,
SECTION A — PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at’ Dallas,
Pa. under the Act ‘of March 3, 1889.
year; $2.50 six months.
six months. Out-of-State
months or less.
Subscription rates: $4.00 a
No subscriptions accepted for less than
subscriptions,
Students away from home $3.00 a term; OQut-of-
$4.50 a year; $3.00 six
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies
of Circulations al,
Publishers Association <= °
© V2
* >
Associates, Inc. uns
“National Advertising Representative
AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES Ixc.
ATLANTA eo CHICAGO eo
Public Notice
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned, all of whom are |
non-profit corporations, duly in- |
corporated under the laws of Penn-
sylvania, will on the 25th day of
June, 1964, at 10 AM. ED.T., apply
to the Court of Common Pleas of |
Luzerne County, for permission to |
merge, the surviving corporation to
be PENN'S WOODS GIRL SCOUT
COUNCIL, and set forth the follow-
ing information:
a. The names of the constituent
corporations and their registered
offices are as follows:
1. PENN'S WOODS GIRL SCOUT
<OUNCIL, 383 Wyoming ‘Avenue,
Kingston, Pennsylvania;
2. WYOMING VALLEY GIRL
SCOUT COUNCIL, 66 North Main ;
Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania;
3. COLUMBIA COUNTY GIRL
SCOUTS ‘COUNCIL, INC., 36 West
Main Street, Bloomsburg, Pennsyl-
vania.
4. ANTHRACITE COUNCIL OF
GIRL SCOUTS, 67 North Church
Street, Hazleton, Pennsylvania.
b. The surviving corporation shall
be PENN'S WOODS GIRL SCOUT
COUNCIL whose registered office is
No. 383 Wyoming Avenue, Kings-
ton, Pennsylvania.
c. Said merger is to be effected
pursuant to the provisions. of the
Act of Assembly, approved May 5,
d. The Plan of Merger provides
that the said councils shall merge
into one, the surviving corporation
to be PENN'S WOODS GIRL SCOUT
COUNCIL and whereby title to all
of the real and personal property
and other assets of.said merging
Councils shall vest in PENN'S
WOODS GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL as
surviving corporation which
shall likewise, assume all of the
obligations of said merging’ coun-
cils; and that upon approval there-
of, by the. Court of Common Pleas
of Luzerne ‘County, the corporate
existence of WYOMING VALLEY
COUNCIL OF GIRL SCOUTS shall |
cease and terminate.
e. The Articles of Merger have |
been filed in the Office of the Pro- |
thonotary of Luzerne County to
No. 17, October Term, 1964. Ap-
plication for said merger will be
made to the Court of Common
Pleas of Luzerne County on the
25th day of June, 1964.
PENN'S WOODS
- GIRL SCOUT (COUNCIL
WYOMING VALLEY
GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL,
COLUMBIA COUNTY (COUNCIL
OF GIRL SCOUTS, INC.
ANTHRACITE COUNCIL OF
GIRL SCOUTS.
SEALED BIDS will be received by
the Board of Directors of Lake-
Lehman Area Joint School, Leh-
man, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania,
until 8:00 p.m., D. S. T., Monday,
June 22, 1964, for general supplies, :
ditto supplies, and
mimeograph supplies. Specifications
and instructions to bidders may be
obtained at the Office of Admin-
istration, Lehman, Pennsylvania.
ELEANOR HUMPHREY
Seer etary
DETROIT e LOS ANGELES eo
NEW YORK
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
NOTICE is hereby given that the
petition of George Elliott Eisner,
also and sometimes known as
George Eliot, was filed in the Office
of the Prothonotary of Wyoming
County on the 1st day of June,
1964 requesting the Court of Com-
mon Pleas of Wyoming County to
to George Eliot, and that the Court
of Common Pleas - of Wyoming
County fixed Monday August 3, at
10:00 o'clock AM. as the time for
the hearing on the said application
at which time any person having
name may appear and be heard.
JOHN B. FARR, Attorney,
123 Warren Street
Tunkhannock, Penna.
1964, at 8:00 p:m.
113 degrees.
The budget for 1964-1965 for
Lehman Merged School District has |
been prepared and may be seen at
the office of the Secretary, Miss
Eleanor Humphrey, Lehman-Jack-
son Elementary Building, Lehman,
Pa. The budget will be adopted
at the next regular meeting of the
Lehman Merged School District on
Tuesday, July 14, 1954, at 7:30 p.m.
in the Lehman-Jackson Elementary
‘Building.
Floanor Humphrey, Secretary
The budget for 1964-1965 for
Lake-Lehman Area Joint School has
been prepared and may be seen at
the office of the secretary,
Eleanor Humphrey, Lehman-Jack-
son Elementary Building, Lehman,
Pennsylvania. The budget will be
adopted at the next regular meeting
of the Lake-Lehman Area Joint
School Board on Tuesday, July 14,
in the Lehman-
Jackson Elementary Building
Eleanor Humphrey,
Exceptional patients have been |
known to survive temperatures of |
SHOES FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY
P.F. Flyers - Special
$4.50
3.50
Womens
Children’s
Sizes 6 to 12
Red Ball
MEN'S and BOYS’ SNEAKERS
(High and Low)
Ladies’ Red Ball
Casuals reg. $5.98
NOW ONLY 2.49
Beach Tongs
MEN'S - LADIES’ - CHILDREN
59¢ - 49¢- -.89c
Sandles $1.99
Expert Shoe Repair
FAIRVIEW SHOE STORE
Dallas Shopping Center
DALLAS, PA.
DICTON'S
MEMORIAL
and EFFORT
Order a Decorated
Cahes frome -+-=
You'll Save TIME - MONEY
need LINOLEUM - TILE
~ PAINT - TRIMS, etc.
if you drive in to .
BAKERY
HIGHWAY
SHAVERTOWN
674-5702
when you
enter an Order changing his name |
lawful objection to the change of |
Miss | boy, was wounded while with: the
STRAUSER’S
LINOLEUM & TILE CENTER
186 MAIN STREET
DAILY 9 -5:30
We have one of the largest selections of “Quality
Floor Coverings”
LUZERNE
THURSDAY & FRIDAY 9-9 °
in the area!
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JUNE. 18, 1964
Only
Yesterday
"Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
30 Years Ago
The World's Fair in Chicago was
off to a flying start. The Street of
Villages was the eye-catcher, a tour
of the world in a single day. Many
additions and improvements had
been made since 1933, with better
| night illumination highlighting the
exhibits. Closed for the winter, the
Fair reopened with renewed enthu-
siasm.
Dallas M. E. Church was nearing
its goal of $5,000.
A wave of burglaries hit the area,
with business establishments and
cottages being entered.
Killed by a truck as he crossed
the road on Main Street, Dallas,
John Dolski, 19, Tunkhannock RD.
Dr. Sherman, Schooley was called
and the body was taken to Brickel’s
morgue. :
Jap beetles wer on the march,
with greater invasion expected. Par-
asites were liberated to combat the
plague.
Miss Lillian Rood’s piano Supls
were given their recital at Shaver-
town M. E. Church.
Wyoming Seminary held its 89th
commencement.
20 Years Ago
Three two-= column pictures on
the front page: Samuel Galetti,
killed in action May 23, 1944, in the
| Italian Theatre of War; Robert A.
| Girvan, reported missing in action
| May 14; and Peter Skopic, missing
in action over Austria May 29.
Sam Galletti, the Lehman boy who
took part in some of the most
vicious tank warfare of the whole
combat in North Africa, lost his
life in Italy. His last letter to the
Dallas Post ended with: ‘Excuse
the writing, I'm a little nervous.
Some shells just landed fifteen yards
from my tent.”
Staff Sgt. Raymond F. Sutton, for-
mer Kingston Township boy, was
missing in action during a flight
over Germany .
Charles ‘Lacey, former Alderson
Seebees in the Pacific.
Al Shaffer was among those in-
jured when a bridge at Fairfax, Va.,
collapsed under a troop truck. His
spine was chipped.
Heard from in the Outpost: Evan
Jenkins, South Pacific; Bob Roberts,
South Pacific; Rolland Lamoreaux,
Seeretary. | Pacific; Fred 'Schobert, Fort Jack-
| son; Tom Templin,
| M. Johns, Iceland, and Joe Wallo,
Italy.
Duda boys, Victor, Leo-and Frank,
all in uniform, appeared on the
broadcast from England, American
Eagles.
Get your Auto-Use stamp at the
Post-Office.
Died: G. W. Frantz, 70, Dallas
Township; Mrs. Alpha G. Smith, for-
merly of Alderson; John Bertsche,
formerly of Trucksville, contractor
for brick work on Kingston Town-
ship high school, and Maurice Jones,
74, Beaumont.
10 Years Ago
John Fielding was elected to the
Jackson school board.
Lake - Noxen had 38 graduates.
The four Eck children played on
one keyboard at Sarah Ferguson's
recital. '
, Air raid test in Dallas was a
total flop. Signals failed to come
through from headquarters, and
wardens waited in vain.
Married: Elsie Jean Ide to Alden
‘Wagner; Marilyn and Lorraine Sick-
ler to David Davis and Wheeler
Hess; Alice Steltz to John C. Wilson,
and Mary Zora Porter to Carl Evans.
Died: Mrs. Emma Coolbaugh, 55,
Hillisde; William H. Deal, 77, Fern-
brook; John A. Bartel, 70, Dallas.
Fletcher Myers, 88, Sweet. Valley;
Stanley Wilson, 55, Dallas; Frank
Monroe, 74, formerly of Noxen;
Raymond Warner, 57, formerly of
Dallas, and Mrs. Catherine Red-
mond, 82, Pikes Creek.
Italy; Howard
Lehman - Jackson - Ross High
| school graduated 53 seniors.
1
I
"Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer
For about twenty-five years ov- |
erlaping the turn of the century,
before automobiles and hard-sur-
faced roads became common, the
small town of Dallas probably had
more part-time and transient res-
idents than we have now. This area
was then way out and quiet, com-
pared to the settled parts of the
Valley.
Several families owned, and oth-
ers rented summer homes here. Dr.
Ernest Buckman owned the present
Laidler place. Judge Rice built the
present Warhola residence. The old
Norton place, in which the Har-
ris family has lived thirty or four-
ty years, 6n Lehman Avenue, was
the home of Daniel Fell. The entire
row of houses on Terrace Street
was built as summer homes, in-
cluding those of Mayor Fred C.
Kirkendall, Contractor W. C. Shep-
hard, Architect Kipp, and two fam-
ilies named Morgan, one of which
had a shoe store in Wilkes-Barre.
A little later Miss Edith Reynolds
built the Northrup place on top of
Huntsville Street hill. Several of
the Baldwin Street area places were
then summer homes.
Some local families regularly
rented their furnished homes, keep-
ing a simple cottage nearby for
themselves. Two of these were on
Norton Avenue. the Alexander Pres-
tons and James Hildebrants. The
present Durrell Scott place was
rented regularly to Rabbi Salzman.
There were various others. A Gates
family lived where Bert, Lewis is
now, but I am not sure whether
they owned or rented. I believe
they owned it.
The Raub Hotel, where the Acme
Market and Atlantic Gas station
are now, was a big place and did
a lot of business, some guests living
there for long periods. The High-
land House, about where Dallas
Junior High iSchool is now, also had
a lot of guests in season. I lived
nearby when it burned. They had
a spring of “Mineral Water” which
they featured. [Some neighborhood
kids called it nasty stuff. Morgan
Wilcox subdivided the old broom
factory, formerly the Methodist
Church, now Rosary Hall, for sum-
mer residents. A lot of local people
kept “summer boarders’. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Barker on Barker Lane,
sometimes called Rice ‘Street in the
house later occupied for decades
by the Czuleger family and now by
Oscar Culp, had so many that they
had fireworks on July 4. Barker's
regular job was delivery man for
A. Ryman & Sons.
Dallas ‘made a good headquar-
ters for salesmen covering the sur=
rounding villages by horse and bug-
gy., rented here of Bart Mott on!
Lake Street: or: Billy ‘Bulford, back
of the L.V.R.R. station. They stayed
at Raub’s Hotel, dnd ‘some of the
same ones came periodically ' for
years, so that they were on a first
name basis with many local men:
The poker games played in the
hotel were notorious, when certain
men came to town. The salesmen
came on the 4 p.m. train, stayed
one or several nights, and left on
the train about 10:30 a.m., some-
times taking back, besides plenty
of orders, considerable poker win-
nings.
The Dallas Fair, late in Sept-
ember, attracted a lot of transients,
some of whom hung around after
the Fair closed. A few became re-
sponsible residents here, including
Fred Riley, who married the for-
mer Nora Bulford, then the widow
of .[Porace Bealer, mother of Mrs. |
Minnie Brown. Some of the people
remaining after the fair were slip-
pery characters, running up bills
wherever they could and borrowing
left and right.
George Brace was on duty in
Chet White's butcher shop, in the
side of the present Barber Shop
Building on Main Street, adjoining
Bert's Drug Store, when one of
these fellows came in and said,
“George, I am trying to get enough
money to go home and have nearly
enough, I am just a quarter short.
Can you let me have a quarter?
Said George, “I am a good many
quarters short.”
Young Ideas sor
FATHER'S DAY
from
Shelves of Clever Items
— D. A. Waters
George, who lived in the house
now used by Forty Fort Dairy at
Fernbrook intersection, was a little
clever himself. White ran a meat
business, starting out with live an-
imals and even making up sausage,
pudding, bologna, etc. The latter
items weres made on the premises
which had a distinct arome on cer-
tain days of the week, when several
days supply was prepared. A local
fellow, not very bright, soon got
on to which days and times the
cooking was in progress. He would
wander back, pick up a big fork,
fish out a chunk of meat as big as
a goose egg, and stand and eat it.
If it happened not to be cooked
or seasoned to his taste, he would
throw it away, maybe in the corner,
until George lost patience.
One day he laid down the law in
this manner, “We do not mind your
having a bite of meat, but will not
stand for throwing any away. If
you take any at all, you must stay
bit of it. No more throwing any
in the corners.” The fellow agreed
and picked out a particularly big
chunk. Expecting the fellow in,
George . had purposely left out all
. the salt, pepper, and seasoning. It
was greasy pork and the fellow
nearly choked. He never bothered
George again.
Better Leighton Never
What Do We Need
Architect's plans for the new
postoffice are different from what
I thought they'd be. Among other
things, I didn’t realize that the
building would fill so much of the
space.
ernment couldn't see fit to offer
some public parking. There is
enough room on the plot of ground,
if the building werent placed dead
center in’ the middle of things.
Suppose they put is back toward
the Bulford Street line. Then much
of the front could be used for park-
ing, which would aid business on
Mai Street and generally in the
center of Dallas.
Reputable information het it,
however, that the postoffice depart-
ment is interested in parking on
“official business only.”
One wonders, though, if puglic
dollars wouldn't be better used for
stimulating -local business than for
implementing 20 th century ad-
ministration. How badly, for ex-
ample, dd’ swe ‘need ‘a “federal office
‘building in; Dallas ?
# i He
A real estate man from Scran-
ton dropped by the borough build-
ing last weekend to get a map of
this area, claiming he was re-
searching properties surrounding
the new postoffice site for the
‘‘government”’. We told him to try
the courthouse. Said canny John
Jeter, borough ‘engineer, after the
‘government’ researcher had left:
“That's about the twentieth call
we've had from real estate men
looking for valuable property at a
bargain.”
Around Town
Lehman Horseshow is scheduled
to be bigger and better than ever
this year, spanning three days now
instead of two. .
After Tuesday's power failure,
‘the ambulating eye saw Francis
Barry adjusting the bank clock with
a broom and a ladder. “Is that the
exact time?” we asked.
Inside of Dallas’s emergency ve-
hicle garage was dappled with fire
froth last week after one of the
right where you are and eat every:
Also, it seems a Jame the gov- |
2] > [Tomes Goodwin
Dies Aged 61 |
Tl for three weeks, James H.
Goodwin, principal of Shavertown
Elementary School, died Sunday
night at Nesbitt Hospital, where he
had been admitted to the medical
service late in May.
Mr. Goodwin, 61, resident of
Harris Hill Road, had been associat-
ed with the educational life of the
Back Mountain for many years. For
42 years, ever since graduation from
Mansfield, he had taught.
Dallas Township children, now
grown, had him as teacher and
elementary principal: He was super-
vising principal in Courtdale,, re-
turning to the immediate area to
become principal at Shavertown.
A native of Plains, he was ed-
ucated in Plains schools, took his
degree at Mansfield, went on to do
postgraduate work at Bucknell and
at University of Pennsylvania.
He belonged to many educational
organizations, State and National
Educators Associations, Shavertown
PTA, National Congress of Parents
and Teachers. Masonic affiliations’
were Lodge 61, Keystone Consis-
tory, Irem Temple; church, Trucks-
ville Methodist. :
Always interested in sports, he
belonged ‘to the YMCA, and Wilkes-
Barre Tennis Club. He was one of
the founders of Back Mountain
Little League, serving as manager.
He also managed the Back Mountain
Teeners and Seniors Teeners League.
_ He leaves his widow, the former
Margaret Rice, Trucksville; two
sons: ‘James Carl, teacher in Plym-
outh-Whitemarsh schools; and Donn
Allen, student at Appalachian State
Teachers College in Boone, N. C.
Harry Ritts, Sr.
Laid To Rest
A longtime Back Mountain resi-
dent, Harry H. Ritts, Sr., 84 N.
Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown, died
early Thursday morning at General
Hospital, where he had been a pa-
tient since May 13 after suffering
a fall at his home.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, eighty four
years ago, son of the late John
and Rosanna Relator Ritts, he was
educated in the public schools of
that city and was a graduate of
the former Woods Business College.
Mr. Ritts married the former El-
sie Nesbitt with whom he moved
marked his 59th wedding Septemb-
er and resided with his
family in the Heights section of
Wilkes-Barre until 42 years ago
when he built his present home in
Shavertown. Few residences were
in the vicinity at the time he set
From—
_ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Pillar To Post...
By Hix
People who live within hearing of Prince of Peace Hpiscopal
Church will wonder what has happened on Sunday morning, when
the familiar bell is silenced.
~
Strangers in our midst have wondered upon ‘occasion if the
Lehigh Valley Railroad were running a special train,
completely
ignoring the fact, well known to residents, that the Lehigh Valley
has been trying to abandon service to this area over a period of
years, and has finally succeeded.
The engine bell, swinging
become a part of the scenery,
its lusty apne: for services, has
and people will miss it.
It was startling in the beginning, but it was a child of necessity.
It developed, after the
bell tower was erected, that the side
portals were too small to admit the bell which has been selected.
This was no faplt of the architect or of the builders.
The bell originally scheduled to hang in the belfry was aloft iri
the belfry of the old Goss School at the intersection of Church
Street and Center Hill Road. ‘When plans for demolishing the old
school were projected, Dallas Township School Board said that the
bell would be available, at a token figure.
The belfry gave up its bell,
Prince of Peace.
Arrived on the grounds, it
and it was trucked down to the
was hoisted up to the tower, but
no amount of jockeying could get it through the narrow openings.
This posed a problem. The
It could either chip away a few
itself another bell.’ :
The Goss ‘School: bell
church was faced with a decision.
fragments of stone; © or it could get
was trucked down to the once quiet
triangle formed b y intersection of Route 309 and Memorial High-
way, and erected on a stout scaffolding for use as a fund-raising
come-on at a church fair.
Each time a parishioner made a donation, he was entitled to
give the bell a lusty. whack, and
the resultant din was amazing.
But more amazing still was what happened in the ‘watches of
the night.
Some time between midnight and dawn, the Goss bell was,
spirited away, and the theft remains a prime mystery to this day!
It took four stout men to raise the bell to the scaffolding, so"
it seems reasonable that it took four men to remove it, but there
is no accounting for misplaced zeal.
It is entirely possible that two men, or even a man and a vol
buoyed up by the thought of preserving the old Goss bell an
putting it out to pasture, may
miracle.
have been able to accomplish the
But somebody, or maybe several somebodies, know where the
old bell is stashed away, and could a tale unfold.
It would be interesting to know what became of it, especially
as it is now perfectly safe.
Prince of Peace is installing the newst thing | in electronic systems.
The Lehigh Valley bell, which once swung wildly as a Lehigh Valley
RR train approached a crossing, remains in situ.
But it is bolted down, completely immobile, its brazen clapper
stilled forever.
The new electronic bell, judging from its try-out, will be melodi-
ous, but it will lack atmosphere.
People get used to sounds,
The engine bell took some getting
used to, but it meant Sunday morning to everybody within earshot.
tled here.
He was employed by the Lehigh
Valley Coal Company for 48 years,
retiring in 1947. Mr. Ritts was ex-
tremely interested in world events
and community politics and was an’
interesting conversationalist.
He was a member of Shavertown
Methodist Church and Lodge 442,
F. & A. M., Wilkes-Barre, from
which he received a fifty year pin.
five years ago.
He is survived by a son, Harry,
Jr., Dallas; a daughter, Mrs. Stan-
ley Harmon, Tarrytown, N. Y., and
old-time extinguishers on the 1927
engine got away from one’ of the
boys who was checking it.
Is the turn-off on the highway ;
at Hillside an improvement? Some.
people think it's so blind since re-
design that it will be the scene of
a bad accident.
It's now good sport around town
to see who's aligning himself be-
hind Governor Scranton. I can’t get
very excited about him, but I'll ex-
tend an open invitation to argue
about it with anyone I meet in the
next two weeks.
® STEINS
® BOOK-ENDS
® BAROMETER
®
TIE RACKS
ASH TRAYS
@
®
® POKER CHIPS
@
®
UMBRELLA FOR GOLFERS
(Has Tiny Bottle Inside)
TRAVEL VALET
DESK ACCESSORIES
So Many Unusual Items - - -
® CARDS
and CALCULUS
SUMMER COURSES
In
COLLEGE ALGEBRA
MATH 6 — Begins Monday, June 15 — 3 Weeks
3 college credits — 8 to 10:50 AM.
SURVEY of ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY :
MATH 803 — Begins August 31 — 3 weeks
REFRESHER MATH
Morning classes begin August 17 for 3 weeks
SUMMER SURVEYING CAMP
Practical Surveying Experience
In Nearby Mountains
August 17 to September 11
READING & STUDY IMPROVEMENT
Evening classes begin Monday, June 22;
end July 31.
For Further Information and
You Must See Them
JEWELRY — GIFTS
‘CARDS — Shavertown
For Registration Contact:
The Pennsylvania State University
: Wilkes-Barre Center bE
669 N. WASHINGTON ST., WILKES-BARRE :
‘PHONE 823-5112
LITTLE
LEAGUE
STANDING
Teams
Gosart's, Fernbrook
Strauser’s, Shavertown
Dallas Dairy
Lazarus, Dallas
Daddow-Isaacs
Dallas Rotary
“Duke” Isaacs
Harter’s Dairy
BDO EEN
NHHHRHOO OH
a
Safety Valve
LIKES AUCTION INSERT
Dear Mrs. Hicks:
The “spread of the Library Kick-
Off dinner was unique and very
well done. I cannot let it pass with-
out thanking you for ‘your lontige
ued co-operation in your suppo
of the hay and the Auction.
R. i: DEMMY
DAD DESERVES
The Gift of
Uncompromising Quality
QUALITY — from Shulton, Tong
famous for fine grooming aids for
men.
DISTINCTION — in the light; crisp,
aromatic formula favored by the
gallant officers who won our inde- Pp
pendence at York Town.
GOOD TASTE —in the handsome,
gold- etched flasks and cartons that
mirror the charm of the Revolu-
tionary era.
The After Shave Losin
8 02.1. a
634 oz.
The Cologne
3oz. . 2.
6% oz.
Sets 5.00 to 10.00
Special
Gift Box
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
Give Dad his favorite
assortment
special gift box. .
in this
1 lb. $2.00
Other Suggestions:
® PIPES
® TOBACCO
© CIGARETTES
® LIGHTERS
® POUCHES
® CIGARS—Wrapped gg
in Special Father’s W
Day Gift Boxes
OUR SELECTION OF
| FATHER’S DAY
CARDS
IS TOPS!
HALL’S PHARMACY
Registered Pharmacists on Duty at All Times
J. J. Fedock—E. W. Hall—L. J. Elliott
Open Daily and Sunday 8 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Shavertown — Phone 675-1191
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53