SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 Entered as second-class mattér 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; Out-of- State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Editor. andi Publisher i... «i iivia vivaininia MyRrA Z. RiSLEY Managing Editor LeicaroNn R. Scott, JR. Associate ‘Editor~... =... 00. Gh. Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks Social Editor... ..n.... Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON Advertising Manager '.........000u%.- Louise MARKS Business Manager >... .... 0 ius Doris R. MALLIN Circulation .Manager .:ii..... Mgrs. Verma Davis « Accounting HF cou is SANDRA STRAZDUS A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania, 18612. “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution” Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member Audit Bureau of Circulations ni Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Assoeiates, Inc. Editorially Speaking Do You Remember? Twenty years ago, World War II was officially over. You men who are forty or older, do you remember who it was who saw to it that you got the home-town newspaper when you were in Okinawa, or in Italy, or in the Philippines? Do you remember how you snatched at the tattered bundle of Dallas Posts when the papers finally caught up with you after a long dry spell of no home-town mail at all? a Do you remember sitting on a glassy beach, dressed only in a pair of pants, your shoulders turning a richer mahogany under the relentless sun, and turned to news of your buddies in Iceland and Alaska, and shivered with them in the ice fields? Do you remember how it was in the hospital, when you passed:hometown papers from bed to bed, or wheeled yourself into another ward to share Dallas with some- body in traction? Do you ever think of the man who sent out over a thousand copies of the Dallas Post each week, as his con- tribution to your comfort and your morale? Sent them out without compensation, financing the postage and the extra help in the shop? ‘Do you know that Howard Risley took the death of each Back Mountain boy with as great a sense of loss as if it had been his own son? For it is given to the men without sons of their own, to look with special affection upon the sons of other men, to suffer with those fathers when the sons are taken from them by the cruel chance of war. It was the task“that Howard took upon himself, to ease the burden for those parents who lost a son, or whose son was wounded in action. He took the telegrams him- self to such parents, delivering them in person. ‘Do you parents remember? NO BETTER MAN It couldn’t have happened to a better man. When the name of John Butler was announced at the Tri-Service Club dinner Thursday night, there was a burst of applause that rocked the room. Too often, a man of modesty, one who goes quietly about his business, is ignored because of the demands of the clamoring herd. Years ago, the Dallas Post did a feature story on John Butler. He had come into the house, perspiring a bit, from a session with some teenagers in the back yard. “Had to show them how to do it,” he announced, loosen- ing his collar and mopping his neck. We fell in love with John Butler at this point. Here was a quiet man, all man, it may be remarked, who could take time off from his work to instruct kids. From that time on, he was ours. The ability to get along with kids, guiding them wise- ly i in the paths of decency and good sportsmanship, hold- ing up before their eyes the highest ideals of living, with- out a particle of self-righteousness, is given to very few men. He is the living exponent of the best in citizenship, asking no credit for himself, giving credit freely to others, keeping himself in the background while yielding the spot- light to the boys whom he is training. The Back Mountain may well be proud of John Butler. Hundreds of boys have come under his influence in the twenty years he has devoted to Boy Scouting. Does the Boy Scout organization have any slightest conception of this man’s contribution to the rising generation? ‘Use Your Lights When driving on a dull day, use your lights. your parking lights, but your low beam. This will not help you in your own driving, but it will help oncoming cars. A maroon car, liberally coated with dust, or a grey car, is almost invisible until it is within a dangerous dis- tance. Many accidents have been caused by a driver who THINKS he has clear space in which to pass, but who discovers, a split second before catastrophe, that an al- most invisible car is rushing at him at highway speed. Drivers will blink their lights at you if they see you driving with your lights on. Pay it no mind. The beam will not blind them. But YOU are completely visible. Put on your lights a half hour before sunset instead of a half hour after. Do not extinguish them before the sun is up, when driving at dawn. Dawn and dusk are the two most dangerous times of day in which to drive. A motorist can see the road perfectly well, as evi- denced by the necessity for creeping along with only park- ing lights in use when driving near the coastline during the past war. Hurtling along at 60 miles an hour (the speedometer creeps up on you) you are asking for it if you do not take every precaution. Most people prefer i die in their own beds. Not nation. Lads If you belong to the Suicide Club, pang | in your resig- Only 4 Yesterday It Happened 3 0 Years Ago Drought conditions made woods | l ‘hazardous, hunters” were warned io) take precautions. Fire warden W. 2 | Crispell at Dallas fire-tower spotted | many blazes. Ten acres on Bunker | Hill burned, four acres of young | trees on Maltby Mountain were lost, | fire on Corey Mountain was ex- | | tinguished by Warden Melvin Hew- | itt’'s men. Halloween costume caused death] | of a Hunlock Creek child. Carl Fink, | | 6, wearing a long coat, tripped and fell in front of a car. | Annual apple show on in Wilkes- | Barre, many local exhibitors. Jim | Hutchison in charge. | Jim Oliver won a verdict in a | suit against Frank Layou. Promptness netted a 5% discount on Borough taxes. These days it's a measly 2%. Arthur Dungey | planned to stay home all day to | collect those taxes before the dead- | line of Novembér 1. | Burgess Herold Wagner rented his home on Lehman Avenue to the | | Lloyd Kears. Coffee sale: 15, 17, and 21 cents | | cents. Kidnapping scare ended up with | Charles | Nackievicz, Trucksville, safe in the clink, for potting rabbits | in a closed season. Two imported Highland cows, es- | caped from Hayfield Farms, were | captured after two weeks of trailing. | Capsule biography: John M.| Culver. | It Happened 20 Years Ago Happy Jack, a Tennessee walking Ne brought home a blue ribbon | from Milton for Bill Stoeckert. Pete | Malkemes got a fourth with Noble | Gala, Clarence Naylor a third with | his walk-trot mare. Noxen, Lehman, | other schools to do the same. | Mrs. Margaret Yanek received a | silver star, | forher son George, | many. | Annapolis Naval a pound. Soup beans and rice, 5| | EF RVE RIT EC RXIT SDE DC QE QI oF and Dallas (hearted | Township drew books from the Li- | hound ran under the wheels of his | brary. Miss Miriam Lathrop invited truck and was killed. People who posthumous - decoration | keep them tied becatise those ‘d killed in Ger-|do not watch where they are Loi Academy ob- a hound. served its 100th birthday. | Luzerne County the crop. Mrs Elizabeth MacEvoy, Shaver- town, was struck by a car as she Heights was out on patrol at the | walked by the Honor Roll Rambling Ridge FFA Chapter at! | Dallas Township was host to sixty ‘and was berated by The Desk for had a tomato vigilante committee under unofficial | acreage of 3,000. Disease cut into and unpaid commission ‘from the | FFA leaders of Luzerne and Lacka- | wanna Counties. | Seldier News: | Alex Jacobs, on wey from Philip- | | pines; Harry F. Martin, parachutist, Fort Benning; Walter Brown, India; Bob | my analysis of the public feeling on | LimeaR) takes over manage- Hanson, France; Dave Evans, Staun- the matter is wrong, that there will ment. of the plant, I have ton, Va.; Bill Rhodes Jr. Pe be - “4 march” of 200 anti-homers learned, Choca. GEE SEE ® Emr Married: Marian Kilburn to Sit | Yorks. Mary Garrity to Robert E. | Payne. Betty Yenek to Charles Neal. Anniversary: Grandma Jenkins, Huntsville, 81. Died: Levi T. Purcell, ville. 80, Trucks- | | It Happened 10 Years Ago Frank Townend, solicitor for Dal- {las - Franklin - Monroe Township Scheol Board, | for a school bus law with teeth in | iit. to make unprofitable the indis- | | eriminate passing of stopped school | buses. Willis Ide, falling from ladder, | ruptured spleen, emergency surgery. | Tom Bonham narrowly missed ' having his leg torn off by a ditch- | digger. Photographer of the recent series | of mystery photos in the Post was | fatally injured in a Texas plane ! crash. Usual potshots at non-legal tar- gets during hunting season. [to 0. | Died: Benjamin Brace, East Dallas. | | Everett Simon, 73, Hunlocks Creek. { definite influence upon her treat- 5, East Dallas, ment of subjects. 77,| grow, not from things seen and ed originally to encourage publica-' Reuben H. Levy and Attorney Her- | Hunlocks. Coslett infant, newborn. | heard, but from an inner sensitiven- | tion of good books for children and bert Winkler, who were leaders in 83, Dallas | Dess. | Diana Babchalk, | leukemia. Hattie E. Meeker, Margaret Thomas, R D. Married: Beatrice Hildebrant to | her paintings, but they return to | ealary might have been more John Joseph and order. Clarence VanHorn, Pacific; | cent home scene on the ! , exhibited widely, spearheaded a drive | ent people. It has become, with ma- Dr. and Mrs. Rosenberg have two | turing years, a philosophical state- | children: Allan, a graduate of, ment of a feeling. | Wilkes, who ig following in his | Hazleton Art Leagues, at the Phil | Maine, and at the Dalles Rotary Fall ! Fair, where her painting, | Lord Bless You”, Redskins took W-B Township 27 | | ribbon. THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1965 HEEEENESEESIEEEESESNEREN + KEEPING POSTED =x Safety October 27: CASTRO CLAMPS down on more Cubans leaving Cuba until airlift can be arranged. October 28: SUICIDE TROOPS, bolstered by mortar fire, destroy 19 helicopters, damage 21, at Da Nang and Chu Lai. GATEWAY ARCH in St. Louis gets its keystone, 630 feet high, dwarfing pyramids and Washing- ton Monument. A FOURTH FDR SON joins ranks of divorcees, as John in jounced October 29: ANOTHER CHILD is strangled in automatic car window. NUCLEAR DEVICE exploded suciessfully under barren Aleutian island. October 30: PRIME MINISTER Wilson fails to resolve crisis in Rhodesia. U.S. stops shipment of arms. October 31: GROUND TO AIR missile sites in Vietnam, plus vital bridge, destroyed. KKK GRAND DRAGON shoots himself as Hebraic | origin is made public, repudiating race and life. AFRO-ASIAN summit meeting off, as Soviet and Red China thumb noses. FRANCE AND SOVIET exchange kisses. - | A A DE TA mis sem November 1: FBI GRABS Brink burglar Jack Frank, as cannon is found in water off Jones Beach. LBJ’S DAUGHTER Luci, 18, says she wants to get married. Boy friend hustled into the service. REFUGEE TRAFFIC from Cuba picks up mo- mentum, Coast Guard stands by. pment. November 2: FAMOUS SCULPTURE, the ,Pieta; on its way back to the Vatican. FIRST CAVALRY pounds Reds near Plei Me. REPUBLICAN LINDSAY Mayor of New York, Senate goes Republican. QUAKER FANATIC burns himself “to death in front of Pentagon, drops bab daughter just in oi time. November 3: VIETCONG STRENGTHENS forces rolnd Da NANG. | BEN GURION REJECTED in Israel. RUSSIA ADMITS loss of another large satellite. Zz 02 Better Leishton Never Ca CDE Seen And Heard | (that I'd like to see), and that The scene: new Dallas Postoffice past zoning wrongs on Machell Ave- | 0 Weather: the season's first nue do not make a right. He's in snow, a minor blizzard. Protagonist: a position to say; he's a member of a workman is moving the lawn. the zoning commission. Moral: the federal government can do anything. A fuel delivery man was broken- lest week when a small Main Street businessmen have been vigorous in their persuasion to get more observance of the one- hour parking limit, particularly with reference to non-customer parking unless there is some emergency. Mobile home are still not. per- missible as residences in Dallas Borough. Despite urgings of a pros- pective resident and his trailer sales agent ‘that one of those big homes he planned to buy would be com- pletely dismounted from wheels and axie, permanently affixed to a foun- dation, and with regular wiring and plumbing, council said no. A shake-up in management accompanies a change in owm- ership of the LineaR plant in Fernbrock, it was learned yes- terday, when three officials -- presiden, plant supervisor, and engineer, were reportedly re- placed. Another rubber pro- ducts company under Greater American Industries (owner of have dogs that instinctively follow their noses in hunting season should Please keep that in mind if you own We understand that a one-man { chef du gendarmes to ‘keep an eye out” for halloweeners on the | time pranksters launched an egg attack at the home across from his, inattentiveness when a raise in (er) in Latest word from the convales- Heights | West —a prominent resident says Lillian X. Rosenbera To Show Paintings At Wilkes November 8- 13 A Sutton Road artist, Mrs. Lillian| in 1948. | K. Rosenberg, will show thirty | Mrs. Rosenberg has studied with | paintings at Wilkes College at de- | Dr. Victor Lowenfelt. { partment, exhibiting for one week | At Hampton Institute, she was early in November. The exhibition | ,ggist D £ 2 at starts with a reception Monday misters [Doan of Women, and sb night, November 8, when the public | her husband was professor of Econo- is invited to view, | mics, and Director of Hillel, Mrs. Rosenberg’s work has been | furthered her studies in art. | of nation’s policy in Viet Nam and our | brave servicemen whose willingness | | more about the | called parades i€ just not using com- | mon sense, as this country we call | way in their own living quarters, University of North Carolina, where | she | Valve | | PRO - AMERICAN Dear Editor: Ags a result of a small group of college students showing up in several Pennsylvania cities on Sat- urday, October 16, 1965, carrying signs that read “Get Out of Viet Nam” and other anti-American signs, I must, as commander of the local American Legion, express our viewpoint. Legionnaires of the Dallas area are deeply concerned with the lack understanding of the conse- quences of the policy advocated by the small but active minority pro- testing our nation’s policy. The American Legion fully supports cur born of love of country and duty | is to implement that policy on the scene. Ag I write this I keep thinking Korean War, or police action, as it was called. I feel that every citizen of the Back Mountain should, without being asked, fly the great American sym- bol, the Flag, not just on Flag Day or the Fourth of July, but every day of the year. Any young man who tears up his | draft card or marches in these so- America is the greatest. Ask any serviceman or woman who was “over there’. So in closing, T am asking every citizen of the area to back the President on his decision. God will be his' judge as well as ours. Thank you. Curtis F. Bynon, Commander Daddow-Isaacs Post 672 American Legion Badman's Open House | (Continued from 1 A) The old Kunkle home retains its dignity. Mr. and Mrs. Badman are shown standing at the foot of the stair- a two-floor apartment which re- flects the same flawless taste in decor as the larger space for public use. A happy stroke of construc- tion is the sloping ceiling, showing the entire length of the staircase. Mr. and Mrs. Badman expect to take a whole-hearted interest in community affairs. They have al- ready made many friends during their brief residence, and hope to welcome them on Saturday and Sunday. | RED SHOES Michael Lengel (Continued from.1 A) raised to build the home in Shaver- town where he now lives. His brother Ernest and his wife and children live with him. ; Michele, aged nine, ,shares the same birthday as the uncle for whom she is named. She is a Girl Scout, in the fourth grade at West- moreland, and some of her art work hangs on the wall where he can cee it. Elaine, seven months old, is likely to be in the play-pen near by, where he can keep an eye on her and marvel at her growing strength and good nature. Mike Langel still spends as much time as he can out in the sun on the patio. He no longer can sit in a wheel chair, and it's been a year since he went for a ride in the car. But the smile and the faith and! the desire to .make other people feel better are still good and strong. DREAM COMES TRUE Some time ago Mike decided he'd | like to have a flag pole, and told his dream to Mrs. Josephine Goer- inger, a friend of many years. Mrs. | Goeringer spoke to Curtis Bynon, Commander of Daddow-Isaacs Post 672, American Legion in Dallas. The Legion, took up the project with enthusiasm and enlisted the help of others. Edward Grundowski secured a pole from Commonwealth Tele- in Pennsylvania ve 4 | More recently, in this area, che and in other states. ” : . . Over the years she has developed Shidisd, With Robert Buhl, ho a style which Is unique. Lite postey.| teaches adult evening classes in art "it means different things to differ- | at Dalles Senior High School. Her work has been seen at Boston iather's foot steps, head of Econo- Museum of Fine Arts, Newport | News, University of North Carolina, | Wilkes-Barre Fiesta, Berwick and his PhD at the University of Pitts- burg; and a daughter, Mrs. Herbert Richards art show at Ogunquit, ; prominent in business and banking circles in Wilkes-Barre. Mrs. Rosenberg explains that her | ‘Book Week | family, from ages past, has had 2 “May the took the blue This is Book Week: October 31 - The paintings November 6. Book Week was start- | to promote widespread reading of People are frequently baffled by them. Today there are a lot of good | Russell Ockenhouse. Harriet Coslett | them from time to time for further children’s books published, many of to James Weiss. Joyce Oncay to | Scrutiny. | Walter Chamberlain. | HOLY NAME SOCIETY Holy Name Society of Gate of eyes. | Heaven and Our Lady of Victory | Parishes will meet at a Communion | Boston University, and Boston Nor- | | Breakfast at Chase Correctional In-| mal Art School, where she displayed | | stitution on Sunday, November 14. | Buses will leave from Miners Bank | | parking lot, Dallas, at 8:45 a. m. | Breakfast will be served immedi- ately after Mass. Reservations may be made with i an usher at any Mass next Sunday, or by phone with Lou Goeringer or Gil Morris. Participants in this meeting must be 21 or over to com- ply with Institution regulations. At Wilkes, where she them on display in the children’s | works with Mr. Richards, she at-| room at the Back Mountain Memo- | tracts young students like a magnet. rial Library this week. Promoting | They hang over her work, fascinated | widespread reading of them is still by the picture growing before their | very important. Not just for the children, either. LEGAL NOTICE! Her background of art starts with ie an entirely different technique from | ESTATE OF THOMAS ‘W. JOHN, the handling of materials which now | (died September 10, 1965) late of dominates her work. Sugar Notch Borough Letters She. studied with Lillian Phillips, ' Testamentary having been granted, and at Hampton Institute, changing all persons indebted to said estate her location with each move for. | are requested to make payment and ward her husband made in the field those having claims to present the of Economics. Dr. Samuel A. Rosen-| same to MARJORIE MADDOW, berg now holds the chair of Eco-| EXECUTRIX, c/o ' JONATHAN C. nomics and Commerce and Finance | VALENTINE, ATTY., 35 N. FRANK- 5 - Wilkes, coming to the college | LIN STREET, WILKES-BARRE, PA. mics at Liberty College, now taking Levy of Kingston, whose husband is | the younger son of Reuben H. Levy, ! phone Company. Key Club boys Ronald Sutton and Wendel Jones, | directed by George McCutcheon, | dug the hole and put up the pole. | Paul Shaver climbed the ladder to] | put a bronze ball on top, and he | | and Mr. Bynon rigged the rope and} pulleys. Congressman Dan Flood ott a| flag which has flown over the | Capitol. DEDICATION NOV. 7 Sunday morning, November 7, at 10 a. m. the flag pole will be dedi- | | cated. You are invited to join in i this expression of patriotism. Of- | ficers and members of the American | | Legion Post will be in charge, and | | members of the Legion Auxiliary | oa ‘be present. Taking part in the , program will be Congressman Flood, the home-building project, and the | Chaplain of the Disabled American Veterans. Mrs. Goeringer, the mov- ing force in the undertaking, is a patient in General Hospital. There is another part to Mike Langel's dream, and the Dallas Post invites its readers to help in making it come true. He would like the flag pole to stand in the center of a Peace Garden, made up of one Peace Rose bush for each of the fifty states. The dedication ceremony Sunday morning will be an important event for Mike Langel and for those who attend. But after the excitement is over, life goes on from day to day. For a lift to your own spirits, go to 160 Cedar Avenue and get to know your neighbor -- then order a Peace Rose from Jackson Perkins, or call the Dallas Post, and thoy | with cinnamon for =the | toast or orange flowers for the and get them if necessary. But not | Montgomery, slipped a bit of flavor- do. it for you Ni DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From— Pillar To Post... So many people have been wondering about Blarney Castle and the famous Blarney Stone, that it seems a good time to give them the low-down. Probably a good many folks from the Back Mountain have kissed the Blarney Stone. Just listen to any candidate for election, dripping honey, or any lobbyist who is pushing his program. Here's how it goes: There are 110 steps up to the battlements, after you have negotiated the steep hill below and the stone steps leading to in courtyard. These steps are contained snugly in a circular tower, and you do well to cling close to the far side where you can get a foothold. The inner tread reaches the vanishing point. There is no handhold, but a redeeming grace is that you can’t look back very far, otherwise you would die of fright. You go up one at a time, following closely. No room for two abreast. When you reach the battlements, there is the Keeper of the Keys lying in wait, and lurking above him inconspicuously, is a photographer. The Keeper of the Keys starts his pitch. He does not demonstrate, because he is a smart cookie, but he explains how simple it is to kiss the Blarney Stone, and shows photo- graphs. : The photographs do nothing to allay anxiety. There is an iron bar beneath the aperture, designed to keep the paying public from pitching headfirst into what was once a moat, about 200 miles be- low. : Men are warned to remove loose change from their pockets, but most men hang onto their coins, and at dusk, the Keeper of the Keys eases his creaking joints down’ the stairway and does a neat little business with a rake. . In the case of the Internationa] Conference of Weekly News- paper Editors, some of the editors contented themselves with taking pix of the Castle from below, and snapping candid shots of other editors leaning over the battlements and making the international gesture of disdain. So, here we are on the battlements. Who is going to kiss the Blarney Stone first? Eyes begin to focus. Here is a guinea pig, ripe for the plucking. (Do guinea pigs have feathers, like guinea hens?) : The editors gather round to sell a bill of goods. “Honest, if you go first, Hix. . J..0. You really ought to haveigy the honor.” So here is Hix, lying on her back, inching toward the aperture, a brawny caretaker (well, anyhow, he should have been brawny, but somehow he looked fragile and inadequate) repeat, a brawny caretaker encircling her waist (what waist?) with his arm, and two anxious editors holding to her feet. : Hix, impelled by a determination not to be chicken, goes over the brink, praying for a seatbelt, grasping the iron handholds, closes her eyes after taking one gander at the dim distance below, and salutes the Blarney Stone. ¥ Right side up again, steaming with perspiration and crimson in the face, she fixes the rest of the editors with a beady eye. The ones who have started to slink off, return sheepishly. A State Senator goes over, a president of a university, a dean of that same university, and in turn the rest of the assemblage. When you scramble to your feet, the inconspicuous photo- grapher hands you a printed slip: Your photograph has been taken kissing the Blarney Stone in two positions. You wonder about those two positions, but it is too late to do anything about it, and besides, you'd hate to discourarge any of the venturesome from getting their money's worth. 9 Busy Buzzing Bees Are Educated To Turn Out Different Flavors Bill Robbins has recently ac-, 6 what would happen if a buckwheat : quired thirty more hives of bees| bee got into a black-raspberry hive. ¢ to add to the thirty already buzzing | The season for swarming is over, . with activity on Staub Road, | but for those people who find them- Trucksville. selves with a totally unexpected But these are bees with a dif-| swarm of bees next summer, Bill ference, bees with a capacity for [says spare the insecticide. The bees turning out honey already flavored will go away, they will not spoil the morning shrubbery, and he himself will come honeymoon. It's a trick of the trade, says Bill, passing his hand tenderly over a small swelling on his neck, where. an enraged bee got him while he! after they have been sprayed. Bees have an extremely import- | i ant function. They not only make honey for your hot biscuits, but they pollenize the apple Te y was sealing up: the thirty hives ;n4 the garden flowers. before trucking them in from Laurel | Run. The Dallas Post has a cast- BH The former rule: never use a fly-swatter on Charles hoo Call Hix to gather it in a cloth, and set it free outdoors. owner, * Dr. ing material into the nectar: cin- namon, wild cherry, raspberry, blueberry, orange, lemon and lime Legal Notice Hives, colored to correspond to) Notice is given of the intention the flavor, have attracted much at- | register in the office of the’Sec-. tention since Bill set them up along- | retary of the Commonwealth and in: side his own white hives. ! the office. of the Prothonotary of The original colonies will = still | 1 yzefne County, on November 17, plug along making honey of buck- | 1965, ‘the name of Hazleton Com- wheat and clover, while the new | parcial Realty, Company; the busi- workers will turn out the deluxe ,oq5 of that name will be conducted product. Nobody has figured Suk at Locust and Birch Streets, Hazle- TT "| ton, Pa.; the persons interested in Notice said business are Stephen F. Per- | chak and Josephine G. Perchak of | 124 S. Church Street, Hazleton, Pa., NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that Jack Sugarman, 438 W. Hemlock on November 1, 1965, a petition | gireet, Hazleton, Pa.,, Harold D. was filed in the Clerk of Courts! gygarman, 65 Wilson Street, Hazle- of the Court of Quarter Sessions | y Pa. ‘and Hazleton Waste .Ma- of Luzerne County to No. 2305 of | t 4.1 Co. Inc. Locust and Birch 1965, by frecholders residing in the! La i, Po. 2 ! Village of Harveys Lake, comprising | Bil I L B parts of Lake Township and Leh- * Sroy Long, IW man Township, praying the Court for a Decree incorporating the Vil- | ALLEN GILBERT 3 3 lage of Harveys Lake into a Borough | Insurance Broker : to be known as “The Borough of and Consultant Harveys Lake.” The Court has fixed | Tax-F Lif. December 8, 1965, as the time with- | A ax-iree e In urance 3 : : : Trust Estate for in which exceptions may be filed to ‘| Your Family” is" the petition by any person interest- | their best pro- ed and has fixed December 15, 1965 | tection against at 10 o'clock A. M. as the time for | the problems hearing on said petition. created by infla- Clifford S. Cappellini tion, and federal income and estate taxes. Edward B. Hosey 288-2378 Joseph V. Kasper Maurice S. Cantor . Counsel] for Petitioners |= Vern Pritchard wishes to thank all his friends and neighbors for their votes of confidence in Tuesday‘s election. KINGSTON TOWNSHIP Tax Collector
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers