The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, March 18, 1965, Image 2

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    QARCOTION A — PAGR.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. Subscription rates: $4.00 a
year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than
six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
months or less. Students away from home $3.00 a term: Qut-of-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week ald, 15c.
Momber Audit Bureau of Circulations
, Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
Editor and Publisher
Associate Editors—
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks, Leicaron R. Scorr, Jr.
Myra Z. RISLEY
wm nals Wome ene wae le
Seaial Editor! ...........:.., Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Advertising Manager: |. ..... 0. 0 Louise Marks
Business Manager. .... -... i 00 Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation Manager: . i... uci. Mgrs. VeLma Davis
ea SANDRA STRAZDUS
Accounting
National Advertising Representative
R AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES ic.
TLANTA e CHICAGO ee DETROIT .e¢ LOS ANGELES eo NEW YORK
Editorially Speaking
MERCH MEANS RED CROSS
Remember when you were in Korea, and the Red Cross
arranged to have you come home in a hurry, cutting all
tape, when there was a death in the family?
Remember when your mother was critically injured
in a highway accident, and the Red Cross supplied the
blood for necessary transfusions to save her life?
The blood was given by your friends and neighbors,
but without the Red Cross, it would never have found
its way into your mother’s veins, bearing with it its
promise of life, except at fantastic cost.
It is the Red Cross which is THERE, on the spot, in
emergency, flood or pestilence or famine. !
~ This is Red Cross Month. If you have not already
made your contribution through the United Fund, make
it now, to insure equal service for those who desperately
need it.
— —
EASTER SEALS
Easter seals are already being distributed, fat en-
velopes going to known contributors to the Crippled
Children’s Foundation, with a request for an early answer
to clear the boards and provide a foundation for the many
spontaneous gifts to come.
Easter seals seem particularly beautiful this year,
the blue of the sky and the white of the drifting clouds
promising wider horizons for the children whe are labor-
ing to take their painful steps and build their small bodies.
Other children take walking and running and skip-
ping for granted. 3 :
Small faces peer hopefully from their windows, look-
ing to a day when they will be able to play baseball; to
a time when those lagging steps will be as fleet as those
of their schoolmates. : Tr
Easter is the time for renewal of life.
Remember the Crippled Children when you throw
away five dollars on something. which will not last for a
month. : FEY
Five dollars contributed to ‘the Crippled Children
Funds means a gain that will last a lifetime.
Give it thankfully . . . because your child can run.
dy lx Cd
WATCH THOSE BRUSH-FIRES
It’s windy, and it's no time to burn trash outdoors.
A blazing piece of paper carried high in the air, can start
a fire that will race across a vacant lot, into-a pine grove,
and burn two houses down before you can say Scat.
Watck it. : : :
Seon
WILL IT BRING THE DEAD TO LIFE?
®¥™ Will it bring the dead to life?
jo . Will it wipe out the memory of the ghastly human
Freight that was shovélled into the evens of Auschwitz?
~ Will it ever cleanse the blot on the human race, to
bring to justice the criminals who implemented this uns
speakable horror? :
The leaders are dead. .
: Will it profit the human race to ferret out the under-
lings, relentlessly bringing them to a slim justice which
can never compensate for their crimes?
Better to brand them with the mark of Cain, and let
them live out their miserable days upon this earth.
. The twenty-year period when they may be prosecuted
1s soon to expire. Let there be no prolongation.
let vengeance realize that no vengeance is enough.
That no black-garbed judge can mete out a punish-
ment which is comparable to the crime. )
That there is another judgment, unseen, terrible in
its wrath.
{
® ee 0
+ KEEPING POSTED
March 11: BOSTON MINISTER dies after bludgeoning
by opponents of Civil Rights march in Selma, Ala.
SIT IN at White House for several hours.
U. S. PLANES stage daily forays over North
Vietnam.
March 12: LBJ confers with Governor Wallace on racial
conflict.
March 14: KRUSHCHEV EMERGES from Biberaraion
to cast ballot.
March 15: PRESIDENT SPEAKS to Nation on Civil
Rights. White-House pickets pause to tune in
transistors.
MARTIN LUTHER KING leads 4,000 in march of
memorial for slain white clergyman.
OSTRACISM ENDS as Queen Elizabeth meets with
Wally Simpson, wife of the Duke of Windsor, ab-
dicated Monarch, over his sick-bed.
March 16: BLOODY RACIAL incident in Montgomery.
Marchers include Northern ministers,
_THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1965
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TRY JOINING LEHMAN
A Lehman Township supervisor
Yesterday
¥ ot | looks at the Harveys Lake Borough
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years | plans with some skepticism, and
Ago In The Dallas Post | suggests it would be cheaper for
. re them to join up as part of Lehman
30 Years Ago
| Township. “No one,” he notes, ‘is
Reserved seats were on sale at| of its mile of lakefront, so why
| dissatisfied with Lehman's running
Laing Fire Company comedy, He says it would be no problem to
“Aren't We All?” Solid citizens in| put on the extra police protection
the cast included Lettie Lee, Fred | that would be needed.
Eck, Margaret Thomas, John Yaple, | What's expensive about making
Zigmund Harmon, Carl Hontz, Ethel a ‘Borough. above® and beyond
S ? Lup
Oliver and Arthur Newman. | the anticipated: $5.000 (plus lots of
Atty. William Q’Connor was can- e
] y | volunteer effort) cost to the Execu-
didate for President Judge in Wyo- | five Assoelation?
ming County.
Borough fathers defeated
sons at basketball, all rules sus-
pended, no holds barred.
Warren VanDyke said it de-|
nended on Federal appropriation
vhether the area got its-new road
+0 Tunkhannock.
their | Well, for one thing, by law, the
| Borough has to buy all the capital
expenditure for improvement laid
out in’ the last five years by the
townships whose territory it an-
nexes. - Lehman says its expenditure
| in that area in the last five years
Luzerne County Grange won the has been extensive.
McSparren Gavel. : SKATE BOARDS
You could get eggs at 27 cents a | The entire world youth appears
dozen, a mark-up of 17 cents over to be surfing on these blasted skate-
1925. Ground beef and pork for boards, and I must confess tg hav-
meat-loaf cost 37 cents for two ing travelled at least three. feet |
mounds. on ene, Sunday, on Church Street. |
20 Years Ago So it appears I. must scrap all
ir plans for renting. a Maserati, and
Hove was held out that “Elwood buy ‘one of the big six dollar skate- |
Renshaw, Idetown, might be in| hoards, which ‘I. can drive ‘home |
friendly Chinese hands. All but two from work. Skate boards are much |
of the crew of the disabled B-29 more dangerous than motorcycles, |
Better Leighton Never
Frantz's store for the Dr. Henry M. | doesn’t the lake come in with us.”
had been heard from.
Mrs. Fred Kiefer was in charge
of rounding up books for the new
Library. Many stations for pick-up
were listed. Any book was accept-
able in those first days.
Michael, Nick and Joseph Stren-
dy met in Italy.
Memorial services for three sol-
diers were held: for Roy Schultz,
at Alderson; Harry Shaver Smith
and Clifford Nulton, at Kunkle.
The old Ritter paintshop was
leased as a Teen-Age Center. '
Ralph Williams and Ernest Hold-
redge were wounded on Iwo Jima.
The third Marine, Luther Gregory,
though in the thick of battle, was
uninjured. ; :
Heard from in the Outpost: Edward
Parrish, France;
New York A PQ; John T. Carey,
Tapa: Clint Brobst, Newport; How-
ard Wilcox, Oregon;Walter Humnik,
Western Front: James Lavelle, Tt-
aly: Carl J. Dykman, Mississippi;
Howard Enders, Dutch East Indies;
Arthur C. Hauck, APO, N. Y.; Ralph
Snyder, Pacific; Harry Sweppen-
land. .
Married: Dorothy Mae Kitchen to
Byron Atkinson. eign A ;
Died: Henry M. Franke,
Grove. :
Holcomb's
10 Years Ago
Bishop Corson dedicated ‘the new
memorial windows at Noxen Meth-
odist Church. Leslie Kocher pre-
sented the windows for dedication,
Gordon Shook accepted them. =
Kingston Township asked for $2
dues from each household to cover
ambulance calls. During ‘the pre-
ceding three years, 245 calls had
appeal.
Back Mountain Branch of Wyo-
ming Valley Bank drew a banner
crowd on its opening day. i. -
The local garden club took a
medal at the Philadelphia Flower
Show, with an exhibit arranged by
Mrs. J. Franklin Robinson, Trucks-
| ville.
Housing project at Meadowcrest
. | would buy ‘my genuine Italian rac- |
Sterling Meade, |
| and sportier, and we expect to see J
lots ~ of them parked on sunny
"afternoons optside local restaurants, |
as well. :
| Now, I'd appreciate it if someone |
| ing helmet, before I strap it on for |
| a. last’ skate board tilt at “Center |
Hill ‘Road.’ or Roushey Street,
‘ Shavertown. 3 :
INDUSTRY WANTED? ~~ |
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| The question which ‘arose at the
Dallas * Township Board of Super- |
| visors’ meeting, that of industry in|
the ‘ township ‘and in the Back |
Mountain generally, was one which |
occurred to me a couple weeks ago |
“when the Greater Wilkes-Barre In- |
| dustrial Fund started its final drive. !
| Does the Back Mountain, or does
|'it not, want industry? ‘Well, the |
| question is a good one, and the an- |
| swer is “yes”, but difficulty arises J
| several respects -- bedrock, lack |
of water, and: lack .of proximity to
| the Turnpike.
don't go off half-cocked, I'm ‘aware
that our major industrial sites here,
Linear and Natona, came about be-
cause of the Industrial Fund.
On the other hand, the Fund is
bound to look after interests of the
rest. of the county as well, and if
a company shows interest in coming
to Luzerne County, well, West Pitts-
ton is as good a place as Forty-Sec-
ond Street, West Dallas, all things
being. equal.
You cculdn’t do things half way
with a local Chamber of Commerce.
though, and it goes without saying
that an enormous amount of effort
would have to go into it.
It's doubtful whether the lack of
industry in the Back Mountain is
due to the fact that people want to
keep it a res'dential area. Local
zoning has not been stringent, and
much of the rural township area
in’ ‘the Back Mountain has been
zoned tentatively. by the county '--
not too . prospectively, one might
add, since the only areas marked
“industrial” are Linear ground, Na-
tona ‘ground, ‘and an auto grave-
yard in the f ari end. of Jackson
Township. : : ah
What has really deterred indus-
try is the fact: that ‘this section of
the county “isn’t close to the Turn-
pike. (Mountaintop, which I'm
told enjoys bedrock and water
problems at least equal to our own,
enjoys no end of industry; as well.)
The new Interstate highway pro-
jections will help the Back Moun- 1:
tain’s position a lot, in respect to |.
transportation. i :
© And the :way industry arranges
itself in grassy parks with big win-
dows and ‘smoke eliminators ‘and
original mosaics on the outer walls,
and I don’t know what all, having S
modern industry around is a real
.pleasure, compared to some of the
residences being built in the world
today. : ¥
“The problem resolves: itself less 2
in respect to ‘‘do we want industry”
than “how do we get it”. ;
The Crucible
(Continued from page 1 A)
trich feather in his buccaneering
hat.. : . : ;
Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks has a built-
in .prompter, ten year old Karen
Line, who «watches. avidly between
slitted eyes, - following the. lines ‘in
her .agile little brain, and eager
to hiss an opening: word when |.
My -own feelings at this time were | necessary, to the Rebecca ‘who is
| sity to cure this difficulty, and that
the various civic groups which were
donating money to the G. W-B I
dustrial Fund “might consider de-
‘voting some of the time and money |
toward looking after «the Back
heiser, England; Alan Shaffer, Eng- | that a Back Mountain Chamber of | ‘bending over her.
? | Comieres was an absolute neces- |
The play runs three more nights:
(Thursday, Friday, . and = Saturday,
with curtain at 8:30, and tickets
4t the box-office, phone 823-1875.
Little Theatre now owns its own
building - at' 537 N. Main ‘Street,
“Wilkes-Barre. ET
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| Mountain's interest. Naw, wait,
| Safety Valve
ENDORSES LABERGE
Gentlemen:
Many parents in this area have
noted with approval that Mr. John
LaBerge has entered the lists for
-election as a school board member.
‘We have all been subjected over
the past several months to the ad-
verse results caused by decisicns
‘made by some members of the pres-
ent school board who neither know
about, nor came for, the solid, em-
“phatic, and effective ideas sponsor-
ed by the other competent members
of the present board. It is
time for a change, and it is good
to note that Mr. LaBerge is
available.
I am a registered democrat, and
‘therefore cannot vote for Mr. La-
Berge in the primaries. 1 hope his
fellow republicans will find them-
‘selves in a position to endorse him
for office as a school board member,
so that all of us who want to see
ood schools in" this area can vote
for him in the fall.
i" Finally, Mr. LaBerge is not with-
out a reputation. A few weeks ago,
‘before even he knew he was going
ito run for office, his qualifications
ber were discussed in Washington,
D.C. (I happen to know because TI
Tt’ will show that back here in the
‘man when we see one, if we all do
‘our best to get. a. competent man
‘and a sincere man, Jack LaBerge,
‘elected as a school board member.
; Sincerely yours,
“Jay A. Young : ;
P.S.: (This letter is. being written
unsolicited, without LaBerge’s
sknowledge). :
Newspaper Headline
“International Revenue Service
Allows 20 Minutes to Fill
Out. Returns”
2 1
Have you timed yourself
i brethren?
‘Do you come within the norm?
‘Have you breezed right thro the
5 filling .
(Of that quaint 1040 form?
x 0
‘Have you read those plain in-
& structions
As did I, then read some more
And found line Z from Section I
“Proves 2 & 2 Just don't make four.
4 3
‘But as I struggled, weak and weary
Through the night, my vision bleary,
‘Came the morn and I could see
[I'd progressed through Section B,
So, having reached these outer
“04 himits, ME :
I might be through in twenty
minutes.
bs W. G. SEAMAN
dear
Former Klabama Resident Says Outsiders Imported
To Stir Up Trouble, News Media Give Distorted View
NOT THE MAJORITY : |
Dear ‘Saftey Valve” a
public letters, but as a former res-.
{ident of Marion, :Alabama, I now
| find “it very hard to:remain silent
{ while’ the whole. South is being
| judged and ‘condemned for the
{ actions of a few in Alabama, a few
i in Mississippi, a few in Texas. =
| Leigh Pegues, the mayor of Mari-
| on, I have known since childhood.
| All though in school he was a quiet,
came up for discussion at the | studious youngster; a, fine football
school board. Children: were being | player; and a young man respected
educated. with no tax to cover it. , by students and teachers alike, He
* Primaries promised to be hot | had a quiet dignity and a desire to’
stuff.
Dean Shaver stopped drilling at
435 feet, when the new Jackson
institution was assured of getting
300 gallons a minute from the 87
inch bore. , : >
Died: Helen G. Smith, 63, Dallas
RD; Mrs. J. F. Letson, 65; Frucks-
ville; Mrs. Grace Bevan, Overbrook
Road.
Married: Mabel Lewis to Robert
Shaver. Irma G. Myers to Earl T.
Chamberlain. -
Mrs. Clara May Lord
Is Laid To Rest
March 17. ST. PATRICK'S DAY,
The death of Mrs. Clara Mae Lord,
Hunlock Creek, on Friday ‘morning
| in General Hospital removed from
{ her community: one of its olde:
citizens. : :
Mrs. Lord who wag born in Hun-
lock Creek, daughter of Lafayette
and Loretta. Brown Dodson. would
have celebrated her 86th birthday
on Decorattion Day. 3
Vitally interested in church and
community, she had remained alert
and busy, spending her spare time
in fashioning lovely quilts’and hand-
work and reading. At one time she
had been engaged in practical nurs-
ing after her husband, Charles B.,
died in 1939. Mrs. Lord was a mem-
ber of Headley Grove Church. *
She is survived by two . sons,
James D. Huntsville and Rev: Har-
old V., Hunlock Creek, with whom
she made her home of late years.
Also eight grandchildren, 19 great
grandchildren and one great great
grandchild. ti
Services were held Tuesday after-
noon from Bronson Funeral Home
with Rev. Delbert Hoffman officia-
ting. Interment was in Marvin Cem-
etery, Muhlenburg.
SPRING COMES ON SATURDAY
So, you think spring always
comes on March 21? Now hear this:
Saturday, March 20, is the first day
of spring this year. Could be be-
cause of Leap Year in 1964,
Jor hack to school, but they didn’t.
| do what was right and fair. Leigh
| was never one to go off “half-cock-
| ed” on anything. . Much of my in-
| formation has come from printed
interviews with him and also. from
letters from. my brother. Quotations
are from printed interviews’ .
“Marion is a town of 4,008 people;
the county seat of Perry County.
The police force consists of the chief
of ‘police and four others; the ‘sher-
iff has ‘three deputies. For three
weeks there had been marches and
demonstrations there without in-
cident. Then came George Bess of
SNICK. :
‘Marion merchants and cafe own-
ers had already opened their doors
to Negroes; “‘svhi 33 and “colored”
signs had been already removed
from drinking fountains, ete; 140
people had been registered to vote
on the first Monday of Feb., and
| 108 on the third Monday of Feb.
| (These are the usual monthly reg-
istration daye as prescribed by law.)
The regular hours are 8 to 4. but
| they worked to 9:30 p.m. Gov. Wal-
lace had sent a state-paid repre-
sentative to help.
But now with Bess in town 300
marched on the courthouse. 139
were registered; 20 were illiterates:
and that left: 119 to be reoistered.
Bess brought some SNICK teen-
agers into town as Mrs. Middle-
brooks was closing her restaurant
for the day. Thev pushed in, shov-
ed tables and chairs, kicked the
doors, and velled until she called
| the police and swore out a warrant
for trespassing. The chief of police
went to the restaurant, allowed
those to leave who would, and
eventually arrested sixteen includ-
ing Bess who was described as be-
ing “obnoxions” for about 45 min-
utes. Then they oot a threatening
call from a Negro leader. So Pegues
sent for troopers in case they need-
ed extra help. The Negro leader
(Turner, by name) got 600 schoo!
children to march to the jail, urged
on by SNICK workers who stayed
at the school. Those under 16 were
urged by white officials to go home
Negro parents complained when
arrested. : ,
to march and then the children were |;
“On one march to register to vote, |’
out of 365 marchers many were al-
ready registered, many had been
completely illiterate. some had crim-
inal records. (I believe this was the
march that Martin Luther King led.)
That day an" elderly Negro” man
collapsed in the courthouse. Some
Negroes brought him © downstairs
and left him in the courtyard, Some-
one told the chief of police who
came and gave him first aid, called
a police car, and had him taken
to a doctor. $3
Pegues said the Negroes told him
they were going to force an incident
and make them arrest them. That
wag the "night violence flared in
‘Marion. At the start: when ‘they
were ordered to disperse or go back
to the church, most went inte the
church. A few ran to the back
where they had a pile of broken
bottles, bricks. etc., which they be-
gan hurlina. The trooner who shot
the Negro had been cut by a broken
bottle wielded by that Negro.
Pegues said they had had three
weeks of harrassmentg with no viol-
ence but this ohe was led by “real
pros’. (Negroes are consistantly
brought in from other places to par-
ticipate in marches and 1 have
heard that thev are paid $5 to
march and $10 if they get arrested.)
The real tragedy is the set-back
to progress.
During the last three years five
responsible Negro citizens have been
meeting with citv officials to discuss
community problems and projects.
Results include a swimming pool in
use for two years and a 38 unit
housing project due to be completed
in the next few weeks.
At Marion “agitators came in and
tried to establish communications
with the local Negro leadership...
They were unable to get the local
Negro businessmen and professional
people”... so the agitators took over
a “new local group.” Pegues said
there has been “close liasion
through the years” with the Negro
community and that problems are
worked out jointly. He feels that
“the lines of communication would
probablly be reopened again if the
outside agitators leave.”
“We have a fine community,
made up of both whites and Negroes.
They are not at each others’ throats.
We will all be living here fogether
after the outsiders are gone. We
cannot let pressures or 1esentful
County.”
courthouse without getting an OK
How would
Wilkes-Barre react? : (Birmingham
nd Selma are not small towns.)
Suppose 600 (or 2500) people de-
‘cided ‘to march down Highway 11
fo Harrisburg. Would Pa.
Police ignore it or stop motor traffic
“for two days? (Highway 80 be-
‘portion of the coast to coast high-
Callif.)
Folfe a group from + Bloomsburg,
would they be allowed to?
‘go to Panama or Korea or Africa
‘or Tokyo to find race being set
‘against race, people against people.
Is this not the way communists
work ? Do they not get the gullible,
‘the immature, the innocent, the un-
‘informed to do their dirty work, to.
‘out in the cold when communism
can easily move in?
Sincerely,
Mrs. Doris Wiant Harvey
about
for that office as school board mem- |.
‘was present during that discussion.) |
sticks of Dallas’ we know a good |
ft +I they “came for their children that | © Suppose 300 people decided to ||
been made. Ted Poad headed the | 'I am not in the habit of writing they had always: told their children | march across Wilkes-Barre, to the
to obey their teachers and now
teachers. were telling the children | from city officials.
DALLAS. PENNSYT,.VANIA
From—
Pillar To Post...
By Hix
It's official now. The instant you see a red kite tangled high
in the branches of the maple tree, and find a small boy valiantly,
trying to get a green kite into the air, you know it's spring, no matter
what the calendar says.
That red kite is going to look pretty silly when a snow stornggy
batters it, but it's a lovely gesture, pointing the way toward daf-""
fodils and purple lilacs, and apple blossoms, and all the beautiful
The March wind always inspires the young to set their kites
asail. The store-keepers have had them in stock for months, await-
ing the first mild blustery day, with its scuddling clouds and its
patches of blue.
Do little boys still send messages up to their kites, slipping a
note over the string and watching it dance away, up, up, up, until
contact is made, and the message delivered?
Does any little boy know how to make his own kite anymore,
or does he have to rely on what the five and ten has in stock?
Getting ready for the first kite-flying used to take happy hours
of work, rigging the frame with slender sticks whittled down almost,
to the vanishing point, light and pliant, asking to ride the breeze.
Stringing the frame, pasting on the paper, balancing the entire
craft with just exactly the right amount of tail, was a labor of love.
Up to his elbows in flourpaste, and with his project spread out all”
over the kitchen table, the small birdman labored on. :
“Usually it was newspaper, but with the advent of stronger?
tissue-paper, the switch was made to gayer kites. #
Probably it’ was a nod toward the future, but my kites were
always made out of the Baltimore Sun-Paper, and I accumulated:
layers of printers ink in the process, an omen of what was to come.
The kites that my brother and I constructed, we flew from a:
flat tin roof in Old Baltimore, in a section now entirely slum. Even
in those days, say around 1902, the jungle was encroaching.
If you have ever flown a kite from a roof three stories up, you
realize that there are pitfalls in the operation. You cannot run
with the kite.
on the string, ready to payout the reel as soon as the kite is above
the level of the surrounding roofs and clear of the telephone wires.
And getting the kite back alive, is even more of a problem. We.
solved this with great efficiency, and got our kites back into ouy
hands without any possibility of their dipping and hanging them--"
selves on the wires. ! 7
They came straight down, and in a hurry, not by hand, but
by means of an ancient sewing machine frame, a salute to a future
dedicated to mechanization. IR
+ It took frantic pedalling toward the last, when the kite was’
fighting to stay aloft and we were fighting to get it down.
We knew that the kite could see a wide expanse from the air,
and we travelled with it in imagination. When the wind blew sweetly
from the south west, it could get a good view of Clifton Park.
From the north, it could look down on the harbor and the banana
‘boats lying at anchor. A wind from the east took it to a ‘place
in the sky where it could see Washington’s Monument on Mt. Vernon .
Place.. And from the south, a view of Herring Run, where the
gudgeons bit in the spring. .
March was the time to fly kites in Old Baltimore.
it was too hot on the flat tin roof.
Later on,-
State |
tween Montgomery and Selma is a!
“vay, Savahanna, Gd., to San Diego, |
‘Columbia Co., went to Wilkes-Barre, |
‘Luzerne County, to register to vote,
“ I am afraid you do not have to |
suffer for them, and then be left.
i
|
ONE WEEK
FREE! “ayy
MEN'S GOLF SHOES
Value $12
WITH PURCHASE OF
Tru-Flite
GOLF
SET
5 IRONS
3.5.7-9 Putter .
2 WOODS 1-3
$30.43
Lewis-Duncan ==
Sporting Goods
NARROWS SHOPPING CENTER
minds scor ow future in Perry
3 0 SEE A 3 OEE EO Ca EE 3S CE ES RETO
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
1
INCI
SERVING RESIDENTS OF
THE GREATER DALLAS AREA
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A funeral home should be carefully selected . . . before
the need arises. Back Mountain residents are invited
to compare Snowdon facilities . . . services . . . prices.
HAROLD C. SNOWDON
HAROLD CC. SNOWDON, JR.
You must get it air-borne by a series of gentle Hel
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