The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 14, 1965, Image 2

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    SECTION A — PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1965
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. Subscription rates: $4.00 a
year; $2.50 six months.
six months.
months or less.
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Out-of-State subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, |
Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of- |
~ State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Saks,
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association * °
Member National Editorial Association © of
- Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Fura
Editor and Publisher ........ vane va MYRA Z. RISLEY
Associate Editors—
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks, LeieuroN R. Scorr, Jr.
Social Editor... .. 5. ... 5.
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Circulation Manager
: Accounting
“eee.
National Advertising Representative
INR ‘AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES Ixc.
DETROIT e LOS ANGELES ¢ NEW YORK
ATLANTA eo CHICAGO
Editorially Speaking
A HALO FOR
The closing of the Lake-Noxen Clinic would be a
severe blow to the community.
It was always possible to get help from that modern
medical center, far out in the rural area.
doctors on call, the community was assured of help when-
ever it-needed it.
Take an injured child to the clinic, and an X-ray
proved within fifteen minutes whether hospitalization
was needed, or whether the youngster could be safely
bundled into the family car and taken home to sleep it off.
Many a grisly accident case was patched up in that
clinic, and sent on its ‘way to a city hospital in the Noxen
ambulance.
Now that both of Dr. Lester E. Saidman’s associates
have established practices of their own, looking under-
standably to their own future, Dr. Saidman i is again alone,
just as he was before building the clinic.
For years in the Back Mountain, it was Dr. Saidman
who turned out in the middle of the ‘night to care for the
injured, to allay the fears of a mother whose child was
gasping with croup, to lay it
was suffering from the results of not following directions,
or to close the eyes of the dying.
Dr. Saidman has been synonymous with rural prac-
tice, wearing the mantle of the time-honored country
doctor who used to drive rural roads in a mud-splashed
buggy, catching up on his sleep as the horse ambled along
the familiar path to the barn.
He can no longer cope
with people.
_ FEBRUARY 6, 1964
Dick Demmy heads Library Asso-
ciation, service expanding.
John Earl, 68, formerly of Carv-
erton, dies by his own hand.
Rev. Charles G. Frick, 86, is badly
hurt in New Orleans.
Died: Michael C. Getzman, Harveys
Laks RD, 64. Mrs. Dorothy Malak,
Shavertown. Alvin L. Scott, Outlet.
Harry S. Sickler, Vernon native, 83. |
Mrs. Lizzie Franklin, Hunlock Creek
RD. Marvin P. Evarts, Five Forks.
Married: Alberta Joan Goble to Rob-
ert Crispell. Shirley Williams to
David Mikulka.
FEBRUARY 13, 1964
Pix of site for new Lake Post]
Office.
Heat at Ross School improved. |
‘Sekera . made Commonwealth
plant manager. Roger Hacklin gets
Duke Scholarship. G. Wesley Lewis, |
Mt. Zion, candiate for Fifth District
representative Republican.
Died: David Jones, 71, Trucksville. |
Ralph Nathaniel Cease, 73, Muhlen- |
burg. Josephine Miller, 74, former-
ly of Dallas.
72, Trucksville. James Franklin
Hill Sr., 41, Hunlock Creek RD.;
Arthur Cobleigh, 83, formerly Pikes
Creek. Mrs. Addie Goerlich, 94,
British Columbia, formerly of Leh-
man.
Married: Regina Ricci
Cystian.
to Darrell
Anniversary: Mrs. Olive Titus, 85th |
birthday.
FEBRUARY 20, 1964
Three Dallas High School seniors |
have chance at West Point, Thomas
Pierce appointed, Lee Philo and
Carl Kaschenbach' alternates, pend-
ing physical examination.
Kingston Township runs into snag
in new building lot: one acre be-
longs to Clint Johnson, plunk in
" center.
Hit-run driver injures David
Evans at traffic light in Dallas.
Heavy snowstorm immobilizes
area.
Died: W. Fassett Crosby, 60, for-
er Noxen resident, heart attack.
Llen Johnson, Shavertown, of in- |
ies in fall from a ladder at the |
CJA. Mrs. Eliza Fielding, 82,
sville. Mrs. Ethel Crosby, 76,
ton Heights. William Engel- |
p1, Noxen. Robert Brunges, {
. Mrs. Edith Knecht, 67,
le. Mrs. Vernon Lasco,
alley.
RY 27, 1964
ark work at Carverton
4 being cleared for U-
“ev eee een
He sees patients by appointment only.
The community hopes that other young doctors will
affiliate themselves with him. It would be to their ad-
vantage as well as to that of the pecple who have come
to devend upon the Lake-Noxen Clinic.
Watching a good doctor in action is an extension of
‘interneship and hospital residency.
It acquaints a young doctor, as nothing else can do,
with the problems arising when the equipment of a big
city hospital is not immediately at hand, when split second
decisions must be made in order to save a 2 human life.
— & ——
More Footprints For 1964 .
Mrs. Esther M. Long, |
. Mrs, DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Louise MARKS
Sir Jlrs Doris R. MALLIN
Mgrs. VELMA Davis
SANDRA STRAZDUS
ee es ee esse
DR. SAIDMAN
With three
on the line for a patient who
with a waiting-room filled
shaped fifty-foot dam.
Hauck ‘to resign from Kingston
Township “supervisors.
Noxen Tannery sale still hangs
fire.
Died: Crawford M. Henry, 80, Shick-
shinny. Benjamin Honeywell, 76,
Lake Silkworth. Walter Gensel, 88,
| Shickshinny Valley. John Frederick,
| 76, Dallas. :Earl Gregory, 49, Muh-
lenburg native. - William W. Older-
shaw, 75, Shavertown. Albert Jones,
57, Noxen. Mrs. Georgianna Lewis,
90, Hunlock Creek.
Married: Claudia Laux to David G.
Stevens. Gail Ann Schoonover to
{ Russell Greenley. Paulette Loomis
| to Frank V. Sturgis.
| MARCH 5, 1964 (
Republican registrations zoom in
| the Back Mountains, Democratic
| registrations are off.
Mothers March, Easter Seals, Red |
Cross:
Oney and Burnat guilty in deer |
jacklighting.
Freezing rain, snow, many minor
| wrecks,
Dick Disque deputy coroner for
| Back Mountain, Dr. Gallagher.
| Stocking of 21,000 trout at Har-
| veys Lake.
Died: Samuel Scovell, 88, Meeker.
| David Williams, 69, Noxen. Mrs.
Violet Buecan, 67, Shavertown. Je-
nine Heslop, 2%, El Paso. Delbert
| C. McGuire, 65, Forty Fort. Herschel
E. Booth, 59, Johnson City.
| Married: Grace Belles to Irvin Bar-
| ber.
Anniversary: Mrs. John ‘D. Joseph,
96; Mrs. Jennie Boice, 92.
MARCH 12, 1964
Back Mountain had flood scenes
too, as Wyoming Valley battled its
worst flood since 1936. In spate
were all local streams, overflowing
banks, flooding cellars. Complaints
to Borough Council and Township |
supervisors.
Lake-Lehman school board debat- |
ed district. |
Burglaries in Dallas Borough solv- |
Died: Mrs. Irene Adams, 56, Sweet |
Valley. Thomas John Reese, 66, |
| Shavertown. Mrs.
| Trucksville native. Ellis D. Ells- |
| worth, 87, Craige Hill. Mrs. Sarah
| Pealer, 79, Chase. Mrs. Margaret |
| Nothoff, 91, Idetown.
} Married: Linda Stevens to Michael |
Carter.
Sales Slip Pads
In Many Designs
Try The Dallas Post
| sale.
‘| Camp Chaffee, Ark.; Joseph Derzak,
| owned by Gregory since it was three
ed by arrest of three young men. |
Mary Gessell, |
Only |
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
30 Years Ago
Lt. John Kirkendall and Major |
William A. Kepner, pilot of a recent |
National Geographic Society Strato- |
sphere Balloon flight, visited Post- |
master and Mrs. George Kirkendall. |
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Heiter and
family were wakened by cries of |
their one-year-old in time to escape |
from fire which destroyed their |
Harvey's Lake home.
Public Service Commission Engi-
neer’s report recommended imme- |
| diate improvements to the Dallas |
| water system, at an estimated cost |
of $1.00 per year per consumer.
Murray Ferrel and Isabelle Hock,
Shavertown, were injured while
coasting.
R. H. Rood, Lehman Ave, had
freshly ground buckwheat flour for |
Mrs. Gertrude B. Watt,
Dallas. |
Ham, 19 cents a pound; Swiss
cheese, 29 cents; coffee, 19 cents;
fish fillets, 10 cents; graham crack-
ers, 2 pounds for 22 cents; tomato
juice, four 15-oz. cans, 25 cents.
20 Years Ago
Photos of three servicemen on
the front page: Cpl. Raymond Love-
land, 20, Trucksville, died from bone
infection resulting from an injury
received in Army maneuvers.
Cpl. William Garey, killed in" ac-
tion with the Marines on Saipan,
December 12.
Cpl. Edwin A. Burkhardt, 21,
Hunlocks Creek, missing over Ger-
many since December 17.
The family of Lt. Herbert Culp,
missing over Germany since July,
learned that all other crewmen
were taken prisoners.
In letters to his parents, S. Sgt.
Paul F. Nulton, Jr., praised work
of Red Cross in the German Prisoner
of War Camp where he was being
held. He was awarded the Army. Air
Medal.
Died: Fred J. Kromelbein,
Shavertown, killed when his
overturned on: the Luzerne-Dallas
Highway. Miss Jane Bravin, 84,
Shavertown. George E. Foote, 57,
‘West Dallas. Mrs. Myrtle Collins, 68,
Gans,
65,
car
formerly of Beaumont, in Akron.
In the Outpost: Carl Dykman,
Columbus, Miss.; John Seletsky,
Fort Dupont, Del; Sterling Meade,
Camp Livingston, La.; Nancy Ayre,
Portsmouth, N. H.; Russ DeRemer,
Camp Crowder, Mo.; Howard Wilcox
Redmond, Ore.;- Nelson Garinger,
Navy Blimp Squadron, FPO, N. Y.;
Harold B. Roberts, USS Solace:
A picture of Pharmacist’s Mate
Roberts reading his Dallas Post on
board ship was printed on the front
page. ;
Lt. John Reese, Shavertown; re-
ceived the Air Medal.
Skiing conditions were good Hn
the Back Mountain. It was ‘pointed’:
out that hot, dry summers ‘are
usually followed by hard winters!
10 Years Ago
Frederick J. Eck was elected pre-
sident of the Rural Building and
Loan Association.
Dallas Branch of Miners Bank
announced plans to: raze building
occupied by White's Appliance Store |
for a parking lot.
Air Explorer Scout John Sheehan
was honored on becoming an. Eagle
Scout.
Chief Honeywell announced no
parking on right side of Main Street
from Huntsville Road to Franklin
Street. Use of the Library parking
lot was offered to the public.
Robert Gregory, Jackson Town-
ship dairyman, sold his registered
Ayrshire herd sire to the butcher
after it caused him to break a leg;
no one else could handle the animal,
days old.
Lewis Bobek was injured ina
hunting accident; his brother's gun
discharged three feet from his leg,
Died: Roger Phillips, Sr., 62,
Dallas; Mrs. Ruth Shupp, 66, Beau-
mont; Mrs. Sophia Lamoreaux, 80,
Chase; Mrs. Alice Manzoni, 51,
Jackson Township. Harry Root, 77,
Carverton.
PERSONALS
Miss Donna Smith, West Dallas,
will enter Nesbitt Memorial Hospi-
tal on January 16 to undergo sur-
gery.
Texas, |,
| died at the home of her sister, Mrs.
“of cable TV reformed slightly this
| Company, could ‘later sell out to a
‘| coke.
streets.
Harvey Kitchen is home again in
Idetown, after spending a week in
Nesbitt Hospital.
» KEEPING
January 6: MILAN CATHE
years.
POSTED «
DRAL completed after 567
January 7: STEEL PACT Seeotiations postponed.
January 8: BOMB ROCKS Princess Margaret's home in
Ireland.
STAR OF INDIA recovered in Florida.
LIZ TAYLOR renounces U. S.
citizenship.
January 10: JAPAN'S SATO confers with LBJ.
January 11: DOCK STRIKE
Texas.
BRITISH BUILD-UP
immobilizes shipping Maine
in Malaysia continues. In-
donesians continue to. land small parties.
IT’S A BOY for the Robert F. Kennedys, the ninth
child.
WISHFUL THINKING:
smoking is decreasing.
Surgeon General says
January 12: DOCK STRIKE
: bolized.
spreads, luxury lines immo-
BURCH OUT, Bliss in, GOP girds its loins.
QUADRUPLETS in Wisconsin.
on the sextuplets.
— @® °
Old stuff. Bring
Better Leighton Never
~~ REFORMING THE. LINES
The lines of battle on the subject
week in the ‘Back Mountain.
The powers-that-be aligned with
existing: TV companies are now vo-
calizing. suspicion that this little
feller, Back Mountain Telecable
big one. No names are mentioned,
but the most obvious big one would
be the reportedly Pagnotti-control- |
led Universal, whose name is now
the tiger of the pampas in Nanti-
If this suspicion of a later sell-
out, with final control of all tele- |
vision everywhere in the hands of |
one outfit, got to be widespread, |
the big three in TV in Luzerne |
County, 22, 28, and 16, would have |
a’ far more effective weapon than |
they had. previously. Right now, all |
‘they have ‘been doing is trying to |
show how the cable will hurt their
business, not a good way to make: |
the public cry.
Meanwhile, the cable company |
seems to have decided that it
there's one thing that galls your av-
erage Back Mountain burgher, it's
the idea of an ‘‘exclusive franchise.”
This became obvious to the cable-
men after meeting cold fronts at
Dallas Township and Lehman Town-
ship. So now the lawyer for the
cable says “We aren't demanding |
an exclusive franchise, but we'd
like to have one.”
Well, of course, what is demanded
at -a. public meeting and wha, §s
demanded in the legal chambers of
+ Tulkinghorn and Tulkinghorn are
two different things.” Plainly, the |
cablemen ‘must have discovered, all |
this piddle about franchisé can be |
handled later and more discreetly, |
without the fury of Nanticoke and
{'still without the recent subterrane- |
| an acquiescence ‘of the West Side. |
Then again, the cablemen have |
one'other weapon. There is no law
that says they have to get a munici-
pality’s permission at all, unless it |
is ‘because they are using the city |
Business is still business.
In general then, the cablemen |
are becoming smoother, mellowing |
with ‘age and experience, willing to
sit! and chat ‘awhile, talk complex
things like franchise later.
And. their opponents—who inci-
dentally include old people on fixed |
income, many in the Back Moun- |
tdin, who could never afford tele- |
vision if the cable became control- |
ling and ushered in pay TV—those |
‘opponents are backed into speculat- |
ing and doom-saying, about what |
great interests could control this |
cable and what they could do with
such control.
-2This is all fear-talk, and brvotir |
well-founded or not, it amounts to
mere whistling in the wind. The
cablemen know this, because they |,
are legal-minded and will go to
great and tireless lengths to help
us see the light, so to speak.
While you may not buy it now,
you may have to buy it later.
SEEN AND HEARD
Local produce men and farm im-
plement dealers are now in their
slow season. Greenhouses we have
talked to are either closed for al-
teration and improvement, or are
just offering staples of the trade,
some vegetables and fruit. New
farm machinery is making its de-
but, and old stuff is being recon-
ditioned for the March farm aue-
tions.
When I was a kid I had two ques-
tions that I felt were too foolish
to ask my parents, and which are |
still with me today. I could never |
| ly spoken for,
|'alleged mistake
! that,
figure out why we start each day
officially at the darkest part of night
and each year at the year’s most
miserable hour. For me the day
starts when the sun comes up, and
the year starts when the birds come
back, and neither T nor anyone else
gives a hang for midnight and
January.
Something over half of the twenty
mile stretch of abandoned Lehigh
| Valley right-of-way is sold or solid-
the agent, Tom Gar-
rity, tells us. The land varies be-
tween 50 and 100 feet in depth,
and most of the land so far com-
| mitted has been taken by adjacent
property owners.
Depth varies because the railroad
| has sold off pieces of individual
sections before, as in the case of
the highway being cut through in
1941. :
Clyde Birth will be the subject
|of an upcoming article in Jeep
magazine. His new one is his sixth
in the time he has been in busi-
ness.
TOUGH ,ON VOLUNTEERS
With the law taking turns the
way it is today, it would pay a
man to chain off his property to
{any and all intruders — the closer
| friends they are, the more dang-
erous, actually, from the standpoint
of liability.
And, by the same token, it should
| be out of the question for anybody
to step on the highway and help
an injured person, because one
and the victim
would have you or your” home-
owners’ policy by the ears. Happens
all the time.
The reason I bring it up here,
|is that one of the last bastions
of country-style neighborly living is
the volunteer emergency organiz-
ation, fire campany and or ambu-
lance, which despite widely increas-
| ed communication facilities, burgeon
| ing suburban developments, and
| commuter living in general, con-
| tinues to be the waldo of the
| community.
Not long ago, an ambulance asso-
ciation invited an attorney to attend
its meeting, and asked him some
| elementary questions about liabil-
ity. Without oversimplifying, it
| seems ‘the volunteer stands to come
| out of many a possible case shirt-
| less.
One of the toughest situations
your average ambulance comes up
against all the time is that of get-
ting a doctor to examine a patient
before moving him. Theoretically,
| the family may not call the ambul-
ance without a doctor’s okay, but
, then there's the situation where
| the family is crying “She's dying,
she needs oxygen, she needs help.
Help!” And out goes the ambulance,
because the crewmen are good guys
and haven't got the heart to say
‘no’.
Not too long ago, an ambulance
was called to local home and found
| the patient dead when they arrived.
They phoned the doctor and said
as far as they knew, the
patient wag dead. The doctor said
he had been expecting that, and
would they see that the family call-
| ed an undertaker.
In other cases, and often on this
one, the ambulance is called to the
scene of a traffic accident where
there are people really badly hurt.
A doctor is supposed to examine
the injured before they are remov-
ed in the ambulance. Ambulance
crewmen say they are reluctant to
waste time calling doctors because
| most "doctors won't come out for an
accident. There is some truth in
this.
|
»
Sinclair
CALL
268-3636
——
The Eyes Are Blue
Perhaps the most moving thing in
the painstaking analysis of findings
in the Warren Report on the assas-
sination of the President of the
United States, is the simple medical
statement of the surgeon who ex-
amined that shattered head:
“The hair is reddish brown and
abundant. The eyes are blue.”
Made Distinguished
Daughter Of Penna.
Becky Gross, editor of Lock Haven
Express and Jersey Shore Evening
News, a charter member of Penn-
sylvania Women’s Press Association,
is one of six women named to the
Roster of Distinguished Daughters
of Pennsylvania.
Miss Gross lost both her legs in
a car accident on an icy highway
eleven years ago.
Far from letting this end her
career as a newspaper editor, a
week later she was propped up in
her hospital bed, writing an edi-
torial on safe driving. She now
drives a specially equipped car, with
manual controls.
She is not so agile as she once
was, but her mental agility makes
up for her artificial limbs. She has
held = important offices both in
PNPA and PWPA.
In her new position as a Dis-
tinguished Daughter of Pennsyl-
vania, she joins long-time member
Miss Frances Dorrance, Dallas, and
Gertrude Marvin Williams, fast
friend of the Dallas Post, now living
in Philadelphia.
Miss Sophie, O'Hara was one of
the first women of this area to be
tapped for the honor.
Nominations from all over the
State are sifted and selections
made once a year, followed by ‘a
ceremony in Harrisburg at which
the Governor presides.
Something New In
Whodunit Fiction
Whodunit fans who are slightly
nauseated by the current crop of
mystery fiction, especially those
books which specialize in four letter
Anglo-Saxon monosyllables, will
welcome a writer who is making
his debut with his first full length
book.
Harry Kemelman has written
plenty of short stories, appearing
regularly in Ellery Queen's Mystery
Magazine, but ‘Friday, the Rabbi
Slept Late,” is his first major, who-
dunit.
Nobody who delights in mystery
stories can afford to miss this. And
if after reading it, he does not start
at the beginning again, to ferret out
the clues, he is missing a good bet.
It’s all there, on every page, but
it takes a Rabbi David Small to
apply laws from the Talmud to come
to the correct conclusion.
The book is at the Back Moun-
tain Library, reserved for Book Club
members.
In both of the above instances,
the ambulance crewmen are given
awesome responsibility, considering
their legal status in court,” which
may just about recognize their right
to speak freely and worship as they
please.
Just a bit more martial bw pre-
vails at a fire, but in general an
enthusiastic. lawyer could give a
fireman a workingover also.
All this is not because of new
laws, but because the courts to-
day feel for a man’s physical wel-
fare to the extent that that the
philosophy is, he who gets hurt
should get money somewhere from
somebody. If I get hurt, and. the
other party is well-insured, I may
just be able to legally burn him
even if he hasn't been proven neg-
ligent.
The volunteers are in a position
that resembles being out on a
limb. Here is a man hurt, no other
help in sight, and they are called
on to give help -- help that the
law “doesn’t recognize, but the
neighborhood demands.
Shouldn’t the neighborhood that
demands the help also demand the
legal support for that help? It
would make sense, if you had a
From—
: emember Back to the good
the
programs on ry the fire music,
rama, the foremost newscasters, the ball games where sports -
newsmen had to use words to describe a game instead of just ‘saying,
“Look at the man run.”
Remember how half past six was an Hour sacred ‘to Lowell,
Thomas, who, without the aid of Dictuses, ‘brought the news of th
world’?
In most households, it came
just at dinner time, with hiliren
shushed to the vanishing point, forbidden to chew their celery until
Lowell was off the air.
’
Monday night was devoted to concert music, the Bell Telephone
Hour, and the Voice of Firestone.
By twirling your dial, you could hear faint fragments of pro-
gram from the Pacific Coast, and on one memorable occasion, we got
a signal from Australia.
The radio has been panting along far in the rear, but who says
it could not pick up speed again ?
Most people turn it on only to get the correct time in order to
make the 7:77 bus for work, or get the children off for school; reports
on how deep the snow is going to be, whether the club meeting has
been cancelled, and greetings to those having birthdays.
Things you’ cannot: get, for the most part, over TV, where pro-
grams are piped in from points SO far away that the local angle is
lost except for a few area newscasts.
During that dreadful day of
the assassination, thote who had
transistor pocket radios kept themselves abreast of the tidings, no
matter whether they were on the road or.at work. .
sistor:
John . Wert
The measured tones of the radio announger: came over the tran-
. Kennedy.
Those lo with transistor radios learned the news that the
President of the ‘United States was dead, hours before they could
otherwise have known from their home TV.
Very few of the present generation ever saw one of the original
crystal radios. They were manufactured in the early 1920's and wer dp
considered toys.
Some of them had supplementary pair of ear-
phones, so that two people. could share the experience: of music
coming in from the air.
It required expert adjustment of the siyital to make contac
Aerials consisted of a wire strung above the roof. One radio owner,
completely disgusted with the reception, howled, “The heck with it,”
‘and tossed a spool ‘of copper wire out of the upstairs window.
The crystal radio came to life, loud and clear, and the spool of
wire remained suspended from the window sill for years.
There ‘are some exceptionally good TV programs.
There are also some programs that are completely nauseating.
Many people are going to discover that seventy-two dollars a year
on top of the cost of an expensive TV set, is not worth the price.
Considering the mass of advertising over TV stations, ‘and the bar-
rage of laxatives, nose drops, cigarettes, and hemorrhoids to which
the viewers are exposed as the price they pay for viewing an in-
different program, they might just discover that they could get along
without TV.
If the radio stations would now overhaul thelr programs, with bs
that mammoth transistor radio
audience in mind. they could be
ready to take advantage of the reaction of the public.
The public is very reluctant to be railroaded.
And the customer, seponding 'f to retailing principles, is
- right.
He can get fed up on being taken to the cleaner’s:
TR gy
Symphofy
shah
To live content with small means; to seek elegance
rather than luxury; and refinement rather than fashion;
to be worthy, not respectable; and wealthy, not rich;
to study hard, think quickly, talk gently, act Frankly: 5
to listen to stars and birds, to babes and sages, with
open heart; to bear all cheerfully, do all bravely, await
occasion, hurry never; in a word, to let the spiritual,
unbidden and unconscious -
common.
grow. up through the
This i is to ‘be my symphony.
—William Henry. Channing
It Pays To Advertise 3
Your classified ad in the Dallas
Post costs you $1.15, including bill-
ing, for twenty words. Only $1.00
if you drop around and pay in ad-
vance. :
There is an outfit ‘which is ad-
vertising big news in free ‘want ads.’
You pay nothing for your ad until
the item is sold, the position se-
cured, or the contact made for
lonely hearts. The ad keeps on run-
ning until it gets results.
the concern nothing but space to.
run it, after it is set in type.
There's a catch? Natch.
If you are selling -a used piano
for $250, you part with 10% of the
250 for service rendered. The out-
fit slings in the postage, free.
Compare $25 fee with $1.15.
You can sell anything in the Dal-
It costs’ ¢
“4 TMS. OLD, BUT irs GOOD
Every once in awhile it gets mis-
quoted, as it recently was in the
Readers Digest. But it remains
the §lickest piece of double talk in
the language. : a
A ‘Senator was asked to apolog
to another of that august body
statesmen. He did so, thusly:
“They say that I called the gentle
man g liar. It is true.. ..and I am
sorry for it.” :
It pays to advertise wiv. In the
Dallas Post.
‘But please: No. Johely hearts,
“gentleman over. ‘seventy wishes to
meet beauteous blonde of affection-
ate disposition, preferably under
twenty-five, with similar tastes in
indoor sports.” :
heart attack ‘and wanted the |las Post, if the article is salable and THE DALLAS POST
oxygen. : the price is right. Save On Your Printing
i I i a
a £
San
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SERVING RESIDENTS OF E
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EE EEE ERR SALE ETRE HR LAER TETRA EOE REMERON VCE ARREAC IN EO CVRD HR LEE EEC QUERY
THE GREATER DALLAS AREA
Hott Cohort th :
a - DIRECTORS
|
A funeral home should be carefully selected . . . before
the need arises. Back Mountain residents are invited
to compare Snowdon facilities . . . services . . . prices.
HAROLD
HAROLD
7:
aw,
C. SNOWDON
Cc. SNOWDON, JR.
feb
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