The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 28, 1965, Image 2

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    SECTION A — PAGE 2
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Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889.
year; $2.50 six months.
six months.
months or less.
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢.
Editor and Publisher
Managing Editor
Associate Editor
Social Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Circulation Manager
HE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Subscription rates: $4.00 a
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Out-of-State subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
Students away from home $3.00 a term; Qut-of-
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
MyRrA Z. Ri1SLEY
LeicaroN R. Scott, JR.
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks
Mrs. DorOTHY B. ANDERSON
i RR NE NE Louise MARKS
aR a Ra Doris R. MALLIN
Mpa Mgrs. VeLma Davis
Accounting. .......v. SANDRA STRAZDUS
A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Wt,
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Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania, 18612.
Editorially Speaking
Bloodmobile Friday
Support your Bloodmobile. The day is Friday, at the
A Back Mountain YMCA.
feet, were once a common sight throughout the countryside.
methods of farming have eliminated them from the scene so gradually
%
In order that a patient may receive blood, somebody
must be willing to offer it.
It is a civic duty for those who can give, to do so.
Vote
No matter which candidates you support, stand up
and be counted on election day.
The important thing is to register your opinion by
casting your ballot.
Elections have been won or lost on a single vote.
If your candidate loses, it will not be by any fault of
yours, if you have gone to the polls.
* *
The Gift Of Sight
A few days ago, a man stood at the crest of a steep
hill, looking down at a beautiful view. He turned, and
slipped coins into the box which was labelled: “Give for
the benefit of the blind, who cannot enjoy what you have
just seen.”
Last year, this man could not have seen the view.
With one eye gone and the other fast going, he faced
a life of blindness.
He had a choice: He could submit to surgery, with
a. slim_ chance of getting his vision back, and a much
Aree Thane: of being completely blinded. Or he could
continue groping in a haze, with the darkness steadily
drawing nearer, a darkness which deepened imperceptibly
* *
~ day by day.
He said, philosophically, “What have I to lose?”
Implemented by the best in modern surgery, the
miracle came to pass.
Each year the Lions Club issues an appeal.
- It asks that people who are blessed with good vision,
sign a card saying that when they need them no longer,
their eyes may be used to give the miracle of sight to
people who now go in darkness.
. Many of us carry such cards.
More of us should carry them.
*
Dance of the Cornshocks
Large fields of corn, neatly stacked in shocks with pumpkins at their
that one can’t remember its happening and only realizes their ab-
The following poem was written by a teenager when cornshocks
Modern
sence when an occasional small field of shocked corn calls them to mind. | of St. Paul's Lutheran, helped pastor
had | Eidam break ground for church ad-
not been reduced to the status of mere Halloween party decorations,
but she felt a witchery in them none the less.
The young poetess is best known to Post readers now as ‘‘Jots From |
Dot.”
Dance, sisters, dance,
But slowly,
For the sky is tender
And the wind is soft.
Spread your skirts and
Bow your heads,
Curtsy slow and slowly turn.
Stand in straight rows,
Lift your arms to the
Tender sky
When the wind
Is soft.
Dance, sisters, dance,
And wildly,
For the wind is high,
With grey clouds driv'n
Across the sky.
Spread your skirts and
Toss your heads,
Raise your arms and
Whirl and shriek,
Autumn madness in our veins.
Whirl faster, faster, sisters,
For the wind
Is wild,
With grey clouds driv’'n
Across the sky.
Weep not, sisters,
Though our life is short,
For it is good,
And our witchery is subtle:
A magic of silence,
With gentle fluttering
Of ribbons,
And long shadows over
Grey stubble.
Some call us cornshocks,
Fodder to be fed to cows;
Ah! We know, but
We will not tell—
Only to those
Who know!
4 : —Dorothy Ruth Gilbert
Only
~ Yesterday |
It Happened |
30 Years Ago
|
|
Blood transfusion for East Dallas |
woman was front page news.
| Noxen Branch, Unemployed
| Longue, Inc., deplored unsanitary
conditions at Noxen schools; saw
| chance for employment in govern-
| ment-financed improvement project.
B. Frank Bulford, last surviving
| signer of 1878 Dallas Borough char- |
ter petition, celebrated 80th birth- |
day in Dallas Twp. home. |
Rains checked forest fire danger. |
Lake Township Senior play cast:
Iva Bronson, Ruth Smith, Basel]
| Lord, Avis Wesley, Catherine Kerr, |
Harold Mayer, | Eleanor Shultz, |
Franklyn Leinthall.
Filler noted that in 1855 mail |
| came from Kingston PO to Back]
| Mountain once a week.
| Quotes column included: LaGuar- |
| dia on benefits expected from N.Y. |
| Worlds Fair four years hence; New-
ton D. Baker recommended U. S.|
| entry into League of Nations. i
| Married: Freda Daubert to Floyd
Neeley. Dorothy Bisel to Wesley S. |
| Moore. Marcella A. Kriger to James |
| L. Casterline.
Died: Mrs. Russell Achuff, Shaver- |
| town; Ziba E. Casterline, 70, former |
DeMunds resident, in Wyoming; |
Donald Rood, Harveyville infant; |
Mrs. Amanda Hartman, 46, Hunlock
| Creek; George H. Woolever, 86,
| Orange; Mrs. Mary Evans, 67, Shav- |
| ertown: John Lee, formerly of West |
| Dallas. |
| pital. grads. Martha
| from Moses Taylor.
in Virginia Auto accident.
|
|
| by vandals.
Twenty six members, four guests,
at Brickel Class meeting. Plans |
| made to buy chimes for church in|
memory of Mrs. Brickel. {
Pix of Clifford “Bud” Davis, Ide- |
| town, with Saipan-based B-29
| named for niece Janic Rinken; |
| Thomas Clemow, Shavertown, dis- |
| charged.
| In the Outreach: Ted Schwartz, |
i Shanghai; Arthur L. Mallory, Maine;
| Charles Metzger, Virginia.
| Lt. Peter Skopic, 11 months a}
POW, stationed in Huston; Frank
Maznik promoted; Byron Atkinson |
| on USS Bell; CPO and Mrs. Andrew |
| Kozemchak home for three weeks; |
| Tom Garrity, Charles Kern, Richard |
| Williams, discharged; Joseph Ger- |
rity in China.
| Died: Mrs. I. A. Rood, 74, Laketon; |
| Mrs. Charles Fischer, 73, Trucks-|
| ville.
At Happened
10 Years Ago
Mrs. Christine Malkemes anil
| John Eck, oldest charter members
dition. i
| Mystery aerial view, present Car- |
| verton damsite.
Charles Coombs, 10, had two ver-
| tebrae broken under wagonload of
| potatoes.
| Allan Robertson, Joseph Ruland,
Wesley Cave, planted tree by |
| Borough school. flagpole, honoring |
| UN's 10th anniversary-
[It Happened
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965
EEE EES EEE EAE EEE EEE
HEENDESS SEEN
October 20: EARTH TREMOR
LBJ ANXIOUS to leave hospital after surgery.
REDS PRESS ATTACK on Plei Me base, be-
leagured forces holding
+ KEEPING POSTED =
EEE EEE ENE®R |
in the Midwest, no damage. |
out.
October 21: JURY ACQUITS Klansman of slaying of |
Civil Rights worker (white.) |
REDS BOMBARD Plei
day, Vietnamese rang
Me Base fourth successive
ers flown in to reinforce.
CONGRESS THUMBDOWNS LBJ on rent sub- |
sidies and teacher corps, prepares to adjourn.
PRESIDENT RETURNS to the White House, en |
route to ranch.
October 22: GEMINI ASTRONAUTS raring to go.
ALABAMA JOLTS Wallace, refusing to pass legis-
lation permitting him
CONGRESS ADJOULKNS.
—————— A A EE ——
October 23: CHAINED TO WEAPONS, Viet Cong con-
tinue to besiege Plei
heavy losses.
——— EC ——
October 24: TWENTIETH BIRTHDAY of United Nations.
RELIEF FORCE, spea
Viet Cong ambush with jets, rockets, bombs, can-
Senator Ted Kennedy eye-witness.
non.
C—O i SEL ———
October 25: GEMINI FLIGHT scrubbed as target dis-
integrates in space.
PAKISTAN ACCEPTS
posal, India holds off.
U. S. COASTGUARD
U. S. AND SOVIET clash on Kashmir.
REDS WITHDRAW temporarily from Plei Me.
ee me
October 26: LONDON FOG causes crash of airliner, 36
killed.
CHILDLESS MARRIED MEN subject to draft.
TED’S PLANE fired on by Viet Cong.
BEATLES HONORED
agers mob Buckingham Palace.
a Mom,” say the Beatles, returning to their Rolls |
Royce.
to try for second term.
Me base, Reds forces have
rheaded by armor, answer
United Nations peace pro-
rescues Cuban refugees.
by Queen Elizabeth, teen-
“She’s just like
| escent home proposed for Machell
| However, two wrongs don’t make
| a right, and as I interpret planning
future. The Board of Appeals would
| do well to consider this in their |
| possible that in a few yeers such
| installations as nursing and conval- |
, DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Safety Valve | From —
LESS FACETIOUS
Dear Mr. Scott:
I feel that it would do you a bit
better to be a bit less facetious in
the matter of the proposed conval-
Avenue.
There is quite a bit of evidence
to support Mr. Laux's contention |
that residential property values do |
decline in an area, following the
erection of a commercial business.
The Borough Zoning Ordinance |
does now state that the area in
question IS NOW STRICTLY ZONED
FOR RESIDENTIAL USE. The var-
iances granted in the past for a
mixed use were, I feel, unfortunate.
and zoning, it is designed not to
correct past errors, but to avoid
the repetition of the errors in the
action on this matter. {
Fortunately, some members of
the Borough Council and the Zon-
ing Board had foresight enough fo
ask the residents of Machell and |
Sterling Avenues their feelings on |
this matter before bringing the
matter to a vote.
Since you can conjecture on the
matter, possibly IT can too. Regard- |
ing the tax dollar situation. With |
the inception of Medicare and the
ramifications it brings, is it not
escent homes will end up as pseudo- |
governmental run institutions with |
a goodly share. of the tax dollar
being filtered directly to Washing-
ton? Then where is the pie in the |
sky tax money we upset our land |
use to get?
The final point I would make is |
20 Years Ago
RXLIST
This may or may not be the time
Isabel Hunt (pic on front page), | to speak, but I for one feel a mis-
Audrey Ashton, Helen Tryon, Jessie conception should be straightened
| Bonning, Shirley Swan, Nesbitt Hos- | out.
Humphrey, |
LR
Better Leishton Never
TT QQ QE QE DDE DIDI] EL
| a radiator in the high school over
| the weekend, and students who
found and drank the contents of
the jug said it had matured com-
| mendably.
Safety Valve
12 October 1965
Sp 5 Daniel R. Mahoney
MERELY A JOKE
I was told in good faith by a,
| prominent member of Shavertown |
Betty Gensel, 20, Chase, killed Fire Company that he understood |
| Dallas firemen (who have been at|
Siren on Parrish Heights damaged | odds with the Shavertown company
| officers over the latter's encroach-
ment on Dallas coincard area) plan- |
ned to join their company for the
express purpose of electing out the
present officers. !
To prevent further misconception,
it should be said that this idea was
given voice in certain Dallas circles,
but was strictly a joke—repeat,
JOKE, over which everybody laugh-
ed and which no one took seriously.
Clearly what happened was that
the idea was exchanged in mock
seriousness between one of the
many mutual friendships that exist
between members of Shavertown
and Dallas companies.
SEEN AND HEARD
The Democratic front in Dallas
Township reeled under force of a
decision in court handing the Dem-
ceratic nomination for school di-
rector to the Republican nominee;
alignments and alleged alignments’
looked to be in a last minute re-
shuffle; and people were wondering
whether the defeated contender, a
veteran of political disappointment
by this time, would have any last-
ditch hopes—such as a write-in
campaign.
Republicans are said to owe their
court victory in part to influence
of the majority in the county com-
missioners’ office. They did help,’
it must be said:
Proximity of the state park hd
in Carverton has sharply curtailed
the sound of gun blasts in what was |
considered once to be prime game
| country.
A baby road-roller snapped its |
chain while contractor was paving |
Ashel Sutliff, John Steele, Leh-
| man-Jackson-Ross seniors, took first
| tests applying for newly established
| National Merit Scholarhips.
David Vann, Westmoreland grad,
| president of class at Wilkes.
Married: Hilda Nickerson, Warren
| C. Elston. Harriet Prater, Theodore
| Dymond. Agnes Tompkins, William
| Valentine. Joyce Elaine Oncay, Wal-
| ter Chamberlain. Jean Marie Bynon,
| Daniel Blaine.
| Died: Mrs. Hazel Transue, 56, Platts-
burg Road; John Levi, 72, Jackson
| Township.
at Doc Bodycomb’s driveway on
| Huntsville Road Friday and raced
| as fast as its frenzied little wheels
could carry it down the hill, careen-
| ed down Main Street under skilled
but scared piloting, and was finally
| brought to halt by by-standers in
| the firehall driveway, arrested in
| threat of coming to a cushioned
| standstill by mashing the garage
| door. !
1 * * EY 5
|
| Somebody in the Kiwanis play
| production left a jug of cider by
New Books At
| Most In Demand:
| “Doctors of the American Fron-
| tier” by Richard Dunlop, a tribute |
| to pioneer physicians and the stam-
| ina of their patients; “Sarkhan” by,
| William Lederer and Eugene Bur-
| dick, authors of “The Ugly Ameri-
| tion in Southeast Asia; ‘The Rabbi’
by Norah Gordon, story of a young
| rabbi struggling with the ethics of
| his ancient: faith and realities of
| today’s world and his impossible
| marriage to the daughter of a
| Christian minister; “Airs Above the
| Ground” by Mary Stewart, light, |
| fast moving suspense story with a
| castle, the famous Lipizzan horses,
|a circus, a murder and a furious
chase through lovely Austrian
countryside. ;
| Thought Provoking:
| “Freedom Summer” by Sally Bel-
frage, a serious, penetrating per-
sonal account of the author's ex-
periences as a civil rights worker
yi /
can” fictionalize the explosive situa- |
well
The Library
in Mississippi in summer of 1964.
Entertaining Soon?
The new ‘Glamour Magazine
| Party Book”, may give you inspira-
| tion and will certainly produce help-
| ful hints.’
| For the Young Adults:
“Time at the Top” by Edward
{ Ormondroyd, mystery, adventure
| and excitement; ‘The Universe Be-
| tween’ by Alan E. Nourse, science
| fiction at its best by one of the
| outstanding writers in the field.
| “Senior Dropout” by James L. Sum-
| mers, a timely story that is funny,
| exciting, painful and very real.
For the Young and Quite Young:
| “Muscle-building Games” by Lil-
| lian and Godfrey Frankel; “This is
Cape Kennedy,” M. Lasek; “Twenty
{and Ten,” Claire Bishop Huchet;
“What Makes a Car Go?” Scott
Corbett; “I Should Have Stayed in
Ft. Rucker, Alabama
Dear Sir:
I decided to write you a. letter
| expressing my appreciation for the
Dallas Post. I have been receiving
it for a year, now since being here
at Fort Rucker. Alabama and reall
enjoy receiving it. I feel that if
gives a pretty complete coverage o
all of the news in the area. I ar
presently receiving my paper in th
Monday morning mail. It gives m
something to start my week off.
‘What I have to say I wish ‘tha
you might print a few lines on sr
| that I may be able to better the lifs
| of other service men, especially,
those who haven't entered the
service. :
I have found that when a persor
enters the military service a whols
new life is opened up before him
I have found, also, that by mak:
ing Christ a part of my life and
attending the church of my choice
which has’ been the Assembly of
God, 1 have been able to endure
it all. We all have our discouraginc
times but we must ‘take the bar
with the good. Roses have thorns
too!
I have found that to do ones best
pays off. :
I have been in the service since
12 March 1964. I took my Basic
Combat Training at Fort Knox, Ky.
and further. schooling at Fort Dix
N. J. I have been at Fort Rucker,
Alabama since 7 August 64. During
this time I have always strived to
do my best. I was promoted to
Private First Class (PFC) on Nov.
11, 1964 and promoted to Specialist
Four (E4) on 6 April 65, during
which time I spent as an Admin-
istration = Specialist. Then on 24
September 65, with a few days over
18 months active duty in the service
1 was promoted to Specialist Five
(E5), which I am now. I have re-
| that regarding architectural design.
| If this is the criterion used by the |
| Zoning Beard to justify this pro- |
| posal calls for a non-residential use |
for the area that has been zoned |
| residential, then possibly we had |
| better re-evaluate our objectives of |
| planning and zoning.
| The immediste gain in tax dollars |
so warmly applauded by “the rest |
of the residents” cen well be lost
two times over in the long run by
those people adjacent to this facility
finding other areas to which to move
as a result of commerical use of!
residential land. !
Your companicn article and
picture of the drainage problem on
Burndale is a bit of a paradox as
well.
mission to use this letter in full,
should you so desire.
J. Gray Mattern Jr.
30 Sterling Avenue
A SINCERE THANKS
Dear Fellow Workers,
I wish to extend my sincere
“hanks to all those wonderful people
who worked during the 1965 Cancer
Jrusade. Although the drive got
5ff to a late start, most of the
area was covered, with the except-
‘on of Dallas Township and Carver-
‘on.
Particularly I wish to acknow-
‘edge the fine job done by the
boys and girls of Franklin Town-
ship, Tom Sickler, Arthur Baird,
Patti Sickler, Sharon Dixon, Carol
Guilford, Connie Rozelle, Jeff Town-
snd and Stanley Dorrance Jr., and
to zll the ‘chairman of E. Trucks-
ville, W. Shavertown, Lehman, Har-
reys Lake, Franklin Township, Dal-
ias Borough and Jackson Township.
If anyone has been missed who
would like to donate, kindly send
your checks to the American Can-
cer Society, Kirby Health Center,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Most Sincerely,
Mrs. Fredric W. Anderson
countless times, as I have typed up
the papers for punishment of other
men, that crime doesn’t pay. I can
thank a living God this day for
what I have. 3
Presently I have a brother who
enlisted in the army who is station-
ed at Fort Bragg North Carolina.
My parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
son Mahoney of RD 1 Sweet Valley.
Thank you for your time.
ceived letters of commendation and
appreciation at many times,
I can honestly attribute all of
this to doing my best. I have noticed
And thank you again for the
| Post. !
I Sincerely Yours
Daniel R. Mahoney
N,
PRESCRIPTION
PHARMACY
Prescripti
Compounded
Strictest
~ Confidence
ons D
R
DRUGS
G
S
EVANS
Bed,” Joan M. Lexau.
Yo
Lo
Harveys Lake Hwy. — Shavertown
674-3888 — Two Phones — 674-4681
DRUG STORE
Pillar T o Post...
The nicest thing about the whole three weeks trip to England
and Ireland, was the array of signs on the door, the windows and
fences, not to mention a giant economy size yellow sheet pinned
to the desk at the Dallas Post when I walked in on Monday morning.
I recognize Velma's hand in this welcome on the mat.
It was a fitting wind-up to a trip that started September 30,
with cake and ice cream and a bon voyage corsage the day before
at the Dallas Post.
Plus a personally conducted drive to the airport, with Velma |
at the wheel and Sandy riding shotgun. All this on top’of a home-
grown permanent a few nights earlier, and a totally unexpected
but very welcome assist with the dusting.
It’s the personal touch that counts.
It’s nice to be missed. ~
Little by little, the details of a perfectly marvelous trip will
emerge from scattered notes, picture postcards, brochures, and what-
not, but at this point, the Pennsylvania hills never looked more
beautiful to me, bare though they are becoming, and barer with
each passing day and stormy gust of wind.
There is that pungent aroma of burning leaves, and a sure
promise of frost in the air. It would be a pity to miss all of October
in the Back Mountain. 3
It's a shame to have to admit it, put nothing out thisaway can
hold a candle to the English gardens down in Sussex. Perfectly
gorgeous blossoms, entirely untouched by frost. Mrs. Joseph Schooley
would rave about them.
All England gets out and gardens, working until sunset and
beyond, but of course taking a breather at tea-time.
Things keep popping up, things that cry to be written: the
chimney-sweep who was responsible for my getting a tiny piece of
cranberry glass, for instance; the mammoth Irish wolfhound loung-
ing contentedly on his bed in Bunratty Castle, a small black and
white kitten curled at his feet; a view of the White Cliffs of Dover
from the English Channel, and Kentishmen wondering audibly,
“Those bluebirds? What ARE bluebirds?” i
Honestly, Bing Crosby’s best efforts are wasted. They think
bluebirds must be swallows. And in Ireland, the horse lovers re-
proach him with having bought up all the finest of the breeding
stock for his stables.
A former editor, one renowned throughout the world of English-
speaking peoples, linking arms with Hix in Stratford-upon-Avon,
and trying to reconstruct all the stanzas of Bobby Burns “Wert thou
in the cauld blast” with cooperation (to the best of her ability)
from Hix. .
And that vertical climb to the battlements of Blarney Castle,
followed by a smack on the Blarney Stone. More of that, later.
Bleinheim Palace, with its galloping dog following a galloping
horse ‘across a large tapestry—and underneath the rooms of state,
a neat little concession for postcards and fresh eggs, a bid for balanc-
ing the budget.
Those fresh eggs—it seemed such a pity to pass them up. It
was not until I was aboard the bus again that it occurred to me
what I might have done with those eggs. I can see it now. A poker
face journey up and down the aisle of the sight-seeing bus. handing
out an egg apiece to grey-thatched editors, with a murmured, ‘Please
accept this as a token of my esteem.”
In closing may I grant you the per- |
Grey-thatched ?
Well, of course.
were all too busy keeping the pot
See you later.
Very few younc editors were along.
They
boiling back at the store.
|
1
|
It was a comedy of errors, with
overtones of near-tragedy.
-ack of lingerie accompanied by an
apologetic. note, the matter was
cleared up, and everybody lived
happily ever after more or less.
Mrs. F. Ginocchett, Fairview Shoe
store. writes:
“Thank you, to the person who
returned’ clothes taken from the
store, and left a note explaining the
theft of a child's shoes.”
Mrs. Ginocchett is the solid citizen
who upon occrsion gives harborage
to clothing left in the laundromat
at Dallas Shopping Center. People,
she says, are pretty careless about
going off and leaving things in the
park such washing with Mrs. Gino-
cchett.
This time, some of the lingerie
mysteriously disappeared, and ‘the
owner wag perturbed. She proposed
to collect the value of the lingerie
from the shoe store or the laundro-
mat, either or both.
A few days later, Mrs. Ginocchett
her store, containing the missing
articles, with an explanatory note
at the bottom of he sack:
“This was meant for someone
else, I'm sorry to cause a commotion
for that lady that lost her clothes.
“I lost my husband, and I had
seen you take clothes to the store,
In
Fowler, Dick
dryer. It has become a custom to |
found a paper sack in the back of ©
Boston Jv Z,
THE BOSTON STORE
DALLAS SUBSCRIBERS
: The Boston | is
Lingerie Back, Shoes Missing,
Comedy Of Errors Closes Run
I seen the door open, send the child
| to take the bag to the door, then I
But with the discovery of a paper looked for what I needed for the
clothes to go to church on Sunday.
| “Tell the owner of these clothes
not to put the blame on no one but
1.
| “l know the one from the laundry
| gave it to the shoe store lady by the
' child. when the child said she was
called next door on the telephone
the door was on the lock and I
| took a pair of shoes for the child
for doing for me. I hope you don’t
blame anyone. Please you take the
clothes and tell the owner I hope it
-»
was never meant that way but sorry
to have you all in this.”
It was signed, “A Widow.”
The shoe store is out a pair of
shoes, but the lingerie is at home.
ALLEN GILBERT
Insurance Broker
and Consultant
“A Tax-Free Life Insurance
Trust Estate for
Your Family” is
their best pro-
tection against
the problems
created by infla-
tion, and federal
income and i
estate taxes.
288-2378
JUST A SPIN
OF THE DIAL
and you reuch
DIAL DIRECT
823-4141
Harveys Lake, Sweet Valley and
Centermoreland Dial
674-1181
Wilkes-Barre — NO TOLL
CHARGE.
and Walker
Store /
Xie SER il
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* R
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