The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 20, 1966, Image 2

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SECTION A — PAGE 2
I'HE DALLAS POST Established 1889
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1966
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
HE EE EERE IEEE EEE SEE EN SLA EY hr
Only
From—
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; Out-of-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old; 15. *¥ x ok o¥ Tne Tan LIE ae The Dallas Rotary Club probably did not know what it was"
i : ir i : gi 1 / ting. Hself in for jt asked Hix t % at its dinner Thedtin
Member Audis Bureau of Circulations : a It Ha ened more to spend. Rescinding of taxes on new cars letting itself in for when it asked Hix to speak at its dinner g
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association «</ » ond toloohon ivi eo pmo last Thursday night. !
Member National Editorial Association oN No an 5 Pp £13 0 ap: 109.800 2 But then, neither did Hix. :
Member Greater “Weeklies Associates, Inc. tat yhow.
Editor and Publisher
Managing Editor
Associate Editor... ..0...... 0
Social Editor
Babloid Bditor v0... .. 0 0
Advertising Manager
Business Manager ............
Circulation Manager
Accounting
Myra Z. RisLEY
LeicrroNn R. Scott, JR.
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks
Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
CATHERINE (GILBERT
Lourse Marks
Doris R. MALLIN
Mrs. VELMA Davis
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’
We will not be rdsponsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless = self-addressed,
stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be
held for more than 30 days.
Yesterday
30 Years Ago
w
KEEPING POSTED =
January 12: MUD SLIDES in Rio take 363 known lives,
many still missing.
EE em ——— re
January 13: TRANSIT STRIKE over in New York. Loss
Trucksville M. E. Church cele-
! brated the 25th anniversary of its |
| dedication. Rev. J. Rolland Cromp- |
ton, now district superintendent, |
| was pastor. His father, Rev. J. S.|
| Crompton, who preached the first |
sermon in January of 1911 at dedi- |
| cation of the new edifice, was |
| present. The original church built
| ing had burned to the ground in
1910. Entire page of church Reto
| , C. A. Frantz, Dallas grocer, was
| reclected president of First National |
Bank of Dallas.
| State Farm Show at Harrisburg |
{largest on record. Two local groups |
| were competing: Lehman, sponsored |
to business incalculable.
SANTO DOMINGO briefly in the news again.
Street riots quelled by 82nd Airborne and large
officers on large horses. i
QUILL LEAVES HOSPITAL, labor leaders jailed
for contempt of court, released.
FIRST NEGRO ever to serve in the Cabinet. Dr.
R. C. Weaver to head Department of Housing and
Urban Development. !
KIDNAP PLOT directed against Firestone foiled
by police.
ES YS emsesstrreess
January 14: CESSATION IN BOMBING of North Viet-
nam continues. New Year's cease-fire nears.
A AT A TS ID,
January 15: DEAN RUSK PLEDGES South Vietnam full
Who Is This Sailor?
to ooze away in the face of a speaker.
|
some-
Phone
|
|
|
If he lives around here,
| body ought to know him.
| the Dallas Post.
Service Picture
Friend Identifies |
| |
i |
To Post... x
"by HIX
Pillar
There is something about a microphene and a captive audience
that acts like the fire siren to an old fire-horse.
Here are all these men, stuffed with gocd food ‘and placidly
digesting their pie. They can’t leave, because it is considered rude’
Most of them have fortified
themselves before the dinner. i
(No wonder there seemed to be a sparse settling of Rotarians
in the lobby of the Country Club. They all streamed down the stairs
just on the dot of six-thirty. And that's what Hix gets for entéring
the front door instead of by the more direct route of the bar.) =
They can blame the whole thing on Williard Seaman, the am-
bassador of goodwill from the Rotary. It was his job to dig up a \
speaker. He must have dug mightily before he struck oil.
Just how much oil he was going to strike was not made clear
to him before the dinner, otherwise he might have backtracked in
haste, taking with him the Dallas Rotary.
“One who needs no introduction . . . ”’ is the favored introduc-
f
be i
4
| by the Ladies Aid, in drama pre- | support h 1 : b | tion. TI was just about to advise Williard to knock it off, when he did * A
rill ; ‘ » = 3 the s e- | 5 } } e S - s . : ip
We i not be responsible for large “cuts.” If your organization tation directed by Mrs. Arthur "HUMPHREY REPORTS to President on informal | pa i Si a) of a | knock it off, and there were the Rotarians, calmed into a haze of i
wants to pick up its cuts, we will keep them for thirty days. Major; and Pikes Creek Club of talk with Kosygin in New Delhi. ER P So well-being, delivered into my hands. Ea 5
One-column cuts will be filed for future reference.
It has been in operation for a good many years. Help
Alderson. Both groups were final-
ists in preliminary competition.
[
: i io
A campaign to battle increase in
Gross in California, en route home
INDONESIANS ‘RIOT when price
doubled. Students demonstrate.
of rice is
of the daily papers register horror
| boy in the service. It asked that |
‘anybody who knew these boys, |
| please phone the name to the Dal- |
* I had asked in advance what to talk about, and been told about -
ten minutes. ;
Of Trucksville Dies |
FE Smee 2 ; ! ; lusion, ther hollow 3 or som brash
: : : water rates was launched by Dal January 16: DeGAULLE ENDS BOYCOTT of Common | ooo: ; | Lo%E he combed dake was @ hajoy oles Hom RES Bo
4 1toriall S eakin : i en | ry : 2 x Jimmie Hopple phoned in early soul -among - the diners: “Twenty-seven minutes on the nose.” =
of y P A les Bur 3 Brvshon, 4 Market, after scuttling it seven months ago. Veto | Thursday morning. Said the one in| At the beginning, I had advised anybody who wished to escape;
2 DS She eade | against Britain still stands. is | the jungle helmet was Tommy Ap- to do so at that point, as a speaker, once launched on a favorite sub-
BUY GIRL SCOUT COOKIES | Married: Emily Frantz Honeywell to] VIETCONG FORCES thrown back by 1st Division. joel of Me Sve Shavertown. | ject, is apt to take a dim view of diners surreptitiously slipping out
{ Herman Schnure. Margaret Belford | POPE PAUL renews plea for peace. \ Ts Li LI er TAN | 5f the hall and taking refuge in the bar. Sen
: Beginning next Monday, small girls in Brownie or | to Raymond Price. January 17: MILITARY COUP in Nigeria, prime minister De A When 4a | (They could manage this very nicely by moving a portable har
Girl Scout uniforms will call at your door, taking orders Died: Mrs. Elizabeth Croom Lewis, kidnapped Bn a dT 9 il | downstairs, but this is not considered cricket. A nicely iced daiquiri,
for Girl Scout cookies. mother of Harold Croom. Mrs. Anna a : ) : ii -m| however,” would have been of inestimable benefit to the speaker.
There are all sort f a 1 h da, b Philip Ross, 57, Orange. IVY LS Duane eollifle oH Southern Spain. Solved fhe ik he 2 kin I hold this’ against Dr. Bodycomb, who knows better.)
iil bes s of appeals on the agenda, but DIRKSEN APPROVES administration policy in | sometimes has clipped to it a plas do] gains . y ; we ree ie
ir Scouts have a very special place in the community, Ii [HH d Vietnam, with independence for South Vietnam | cut for publication. Occasionally, | Anybody who expected to be regaled with a warme -over ip. oa
and giving them an assist is a real pleasure. : appene the goal the release is used without the pic- | to England and Ireland, was doomed to disappointment. Williard- publ
So you don't care much about cookies, on account of : EE ON Ey ture, if there is just room for the | in making his introduction of one who needs no. introduction, made | Pot
that tell-tale look at the scales in the morning ? 20 Y A January 18: AMBASSADOR GOLDBERG appears on TO- | message and nothing else. | some mention, in a hopeful sort of a fashion, of my having hung oun
Who says you have to eat them yourself? Give them ears 80 DAY SHOW, says nothing in long interview. | upside down to kiss the Blarney Stone, and of having pix to prove jt. Co
away. Open a box in the office and invite folks to help A MADAME GHANDI elected prime minister of C The Blarney Stone, to my mind, along with the pix, would much vary
themselves. North Star Farms was erecting a India. No relation to the Mahatma. Say ely J alve | better remain in Ireland. Let us leave it that the pix were far from “pot
But buy them. i Jo addition to its Trucks- SHRIVER RELIEVED of Peace Corps job, to spend : flattering and if I:can’t be flattered, I won't play. 53 befay
Not because they contain a certain amount of hi lg Bs Fritz. Idetown. shot full time on Anti-poverty program. DONATION DAY So, that left the Dallas Post on a Thursday morning, the dayW., ke
nourishment, a discouraging number of calories, or be- dont on o cohol noiackr i thi 8,500 MORE U. S. troops land in Vietnam. Seek biks oats after press day, as a fitting subject. on ae
cause the cookies smell delightfully fresh when the box is South Pacific, had been listed as peace, prepare for war, administration motto. You re alwils sofvety Tinddin © There was that manuscript, started some time ago, which goes find
opened. iss : 43. ’ SEE 3 {otis : int nsiderable detail on the subject of the day after the paper hin
Bus thers no only beats tis the hing dor or | mt Seat | Janay T0- TUNAR WW VERR commef preceded by Kom soo my opto fms 0 snd dt | =
z : ! ’ a Br ici i | of our annual Donati > $ : : ar .
because neighbors’ children KNOW that you will support nese prison camp. Vicious Vietcong attach on smarméd refugee camp, | this year on November 18th, that It locked like a good moment to bring it out for an airing. Vi Helis
their project; but because Girl Scouting stands for all that Bepnoth and James Oliver DN pid. puted. I ; the guests of the Old Ladies Home, Sometime 1 might even finish it ; gry
‘is decent and upstanding in a turbulent society, where formed a partnership to cany = rv SY pnts © 4 ustralia retires. and the members of the Board, all But the first chapter stands by itself. It’s called, ‘‘Just Cancel Put
values are being questioned and assayed ever hour of the automobile business of their NOVELIST NORRIS dies. i wish me to express our deep ap- My Subscription : Sh.
Cr des, y father James R. Oliver in Dallas. COMMON MARKET deadlocked in Luxembourg, reciation of your interest and co- : : ih thor’ NC
y day. Meat supply was below normal, recesses. DeCaulle asin | P : | That was to have been the title of the book, but some other Trai
Buy Girl Scout cookies because Girl Scouting offers i due to strike-bound meat rite! gaan il, XSCesseR., Peal loam, oy Ee od a . newspaper guy has stolen my thunder, using that title for a recent icc
something to little girls and teen-agers that seems to be plants s publicity chairman, I am par-| 3... 5 sequel to “Put'It.On The Front Page.” the |
: &z Ta AT TT TS | ; Las od :
sadly lacking in the hustle and bustle of modern life. | Mt. Evergreen Company was x . > a ? an gy iin ne on So, I'm left with eight chapters, six more to come, and no title. and
Buy Girl Scout cookies because you think little girls | turning out 3.000 wronths a wool : Better Leighton N ever prt > ha midi aT con. hardly That's why the Dallas Rotary got a prevue. tary
should have a breathing spell before being pitchforked a iy a REVERE ® | bear ‘to ‘repeat the same old in- oT
headfi i i i S i pais a re : bo viists an i eT :
a ose Srey speeds them into J ater turned the plant into a Bitter Pill ed by, effluent from a septic tank | Errylion another. time. A Posh To
Ly : : \ ; rouse.) Over a cup of coffee down at|or sump. There must be a cheaper | @PProach is a joy: : CARD OF THANKS of *
Little girls should have a chance to be little girls. News from servicemem: William local restaurants, the same guys!'way to control somebody’s over- Yours most sincerely, a | Mrs. Betty Lauderbaugh § ga busi
Girl Scouting is based on this hope. Dale Parsons, discharged. Robert who read “only ‘the sports page” figyfing septic tank than bringing Marion ‘Woodward ayne Mrs. Russell Coolbaugh, Harold Colu
. iin. a grader
“it along.
Buy a box. Buy two boxes. Buy half a dozen boxes.
You will be helping along the camping program
which gives girls a chance to live close to nature, employ
skills that their great-grandmothers once used, and join
in wholesome activity with a group of girls their own age.
and four men.
| from Japan. Bill Niemeyer, Okina- * *
| wa. Norman Stair, Saipan. Willard
|E. John Jr. discharged. F. D. Pola- |
| chek, Japan.
at the amount of social security a
tax they have to pay out of their
wages to support Johnson's Medi-
care.
: | and Glenn, Lehman, wish to express
HAVE YOU SEEN THIS COLLIE? | Friends of Mrs. Betty Lauder-| their sincere appreciation for the ;
While a popular health cult in| : : . | baugh. Trucksville, may call tonight
| Noxen has stopped running a mile’ A three-year old collie dog is 7 to 9 at the Disque Funeral Home.
| s | of the Stull road in less than a missing. The area has been combed, | Services are scheduled for Friday
| Married: Eleanor Bartels to Gordon | Here are guys who are in thet nue by doctor's orders. due to Put nothing has been found. |at 2 p.m., Rev. Robert Lukens of-
May. Minnie Mae Coolbaugh to! $3600 wage bracket (the median | 4 ) The dog, belonging to
: ] 1 ; Mrs. | ficiating. Burial will ‘be at Mt.
: . | . I th pit f th t rat . ta
Charles Miller. Evelyn Romonski to| of the greater Wilkes-Barre area) | Sey 2 CR Thomas “Bunney, Huntsville-Hillside | Greenwood.
A | least hur . ’
Carl Roberts. Jeanne L. Cole 19 | which is noted to be the lowest any- | gast one member got hung up on Road, slipped his collar two weeks | ' Mrs. Lauderbaugh, taken by am-
| many kindnesses extended to them
by their friends and neighbors dur"
ing the illness and death of their
husband and father. :
cm
j Lauderbaugh; two sons: David, Phil- :
William H. Tredinnick. |
THAT WAGE TAX
Most of ‘the folks hereabouts are not going to balk
too hard at the 1% income tax, because if Wilkes-Barre
is going to get its bite, why not Dallas Borough? ¢
But a lot of us are going to be perturbed when it be-.
comes public knowledge just how little we are worth on
the hoof.
The Federal income tax is one of those remote con-
trol propositions, it’s completely detached from every-
day living. You'#e stuck with it, and you accept it. Like
the car registration, where you pay the same, whether
you drive a Caddie or a 1951 Chevvie.
But with a purely local tax, too many local people
going to know entirely too much about your business.
There is also the definite possibility that there will
be a State income tax, in addition to the Federal and the
local income taxes.
When this comes to pass, there are a good many
folks who are going to wonder why they continue to beat
their heads against a stone wall making a living, when
the government is willing to fork over for the abolish-
ment of poverty.
are
a
/
Get A Lead Of DeWitt's Remedy
For Feeling Down In The Mouth
Jan. 12, 1966
Dear Hix: |
I have been thinking of this]
problem of store teeth, and I have |
come up with some observations. |
The dentists that make ‘em ought
to be made to break them in for
the unsuspecting victims.
Here is the proposition; they go
to work and yank and otherwise
separate us from nature's imple- |
ments which have served us faith- |
fully all these umpty years. Most
of the teeth were in “good as new’
condition with the exception of
some strippings and pot holes. We
have to go around with these holes
in our head until the dentist thinks |
he can make an impression. Den-
tists don’t impress me much, they
are so down in the mouth.
And when the day comes to get
your dentures you find them set |
up like a row of corn on a perfect
ear. Now anybodv can snot ‘em at
the end of a football field, they are
a dead giveaway. Why can’t they
imitate a guy with normal teeth!
and give a guy a break and bolster
up a guv’s ego because at my age |
my ego can stand a lot of]
bolstering ?
My trouble is both uppers and |
lowers. One advantage of dentures - |
as dentists love to call ‘em, is that |
you can take ‘em out and scour!
| tongue has
them with Dutch Cleanser or what-
ever is handy. That's the only ad-
vantage I can see in dentures. I
wasn’t so bad to look at before this
dentist talked me into them in his
persuasive way, but now I look like
I had been in a fight and my upper
| lip was out of joint, sorta on the
lantern jaw side. Every time I
cough I have to hang onto my up-
pers with my tongue, and my
a charley horse from
holding the plate up. Next thing I
know I'll have neuralgia in my
tongue, something that should hap-
pen only to women.
Most of the time I get half .way
to town and my tongue sloshes
around to notify me that I forgot
my dentures. T can’t half talk, much
less sing -- I'm afraid of the high
notes and the uppers flying out.
Why I can’t even whistle any more.
| I have tried all the mucilage they
| sell in the drugstore to hold uppers
in place so you can even eat an
apple but when you take the uppers
| out at night half the palate comes
out with them. There ought to be
|a law.
Why 1 know of a Priest up in
Inkerman who had to have some
new china for his dinner, and the
“committee” sent to Sears Roebuck
| in Chicago for some choppers. The
full set came in the mail a couple
weeks later on a Saturday, and the
Died: Mary Rusinko, 18. Alderson. |
Anniversery: Mr. and Mrs. Aaron |
Sutton, 55th.
It Happened
Don Smith got the nomination
for vice president of the’ Pennsyl-
vania Society for Professional En-
gineers. 3
Eleanor Rodriquez was elected
‘Sweetheart of Blue Ridge Chapter
FFA.
Local green tomato growers who
move to Florida for the winter to
make ancther crop, battled frost
with smudge fires to preserve their
cucumber crops.
Harveys Lake American Legion
Post bought the Baird Street prop-
erty for eventual building site.
George Yurko and George Major
took ribbons at the Farm Show.
FFA certificates for ‘Yurko, Lester
Lynn and Rafael Rodriguez.
Five districts recognized the need
for a new high school. Feelers in
the direction of a 5-way jointure
were noted: Dallas Borough, Dallas,
Kingston, Franklin and Monroe
~~
was, “How long can we wait?”
Local branch banks instituted
service charges to counter-balance
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spini revived
by oxygen from Dallas ambulance.
Apmiversary: Mrs. Frank Wright,
86.
next day (Sunday) the Priest
preached a sermon for two hours,
The “committee” called a meeting
and examined the teeth and dis-
covered they were women’s teeth.
They finally got him fixed up, and
about that time the Top Brass in
Scranton moved the Priest over
to Moosic. The “committee” held
a meeting and warned the Top
Brass in Scranton that the next
Priest they sent to Inkerman would
have to have a good solid set of
teeth, or no soap.
I talked with the dentist today
and he said he would fix me up
for a slight additional fee. Y’know
it's gittin’ so five dollars don’t last
you three weeks anymore.
Don’t you sign my name to this
one because if you do Tll throw
a moth in your new fur coat.
P. S. I'm sure this is right down
your alley. :
Editorial note: WHAT new fur coat ?
And what alley ?
| where
10 Years Ago
Townships. The question voiced |
in the United States of|
America.
At $3600 a year, where they were |
i paying $130.50, they are now pay- |
[ing $151.20. Where did they think |
| the money was coming from? Or
| were they (too busy reading the,
:
| sports page to worry about it?
“Only half a page of sports tos]
| dav.” Well, that’s tough, but one
| good thing. anyway, 'the govern- |
ment is taking care of us -- the
Democratic government, the “poor
man’s party” (that's one way of
|. making the Johnson government
the party of ALL the people --
| make everyone poorer.) Z
“Jeez -- look at the Social Se-
curity I'm gonna have to pay for |
| this Medicare now.” Tell it to John-
ison, buddy, if you can get him on
| the line. Maybe he'll give you one
{ of his free pills
There has been talk of a possible
i reduction in, property tax millage!
| to compensate for any wage tax
| which local municipalities may be |
| forced to levy to keep the money
| out of Wilkes-Barre coffers and re- |
{ tain it in the Back Mountain. May-
| be this is a good idea and wake
not. |
{At least one municipality, Dallas |
| Borough, has felt for some time
now that a rise in millage would
help implement better service, and
perhaps this is the time and place |
to do it. Of course, the 1966 budget |
2% interest rate on savingg| will give us a better idea. i
accounts. i ; | But it seems that it wouldn't]
Coal gas victims in Fernbrook, | hurt to reaffirm the principle,
which seems to be on the wane in
this day of federal panacea, that
local governments can provide a
balanced system of local tax and
local services -- a kind of pay-as-
you-go plan, that is being all too
up-staged in this day of ‘matching
funds” and loans from Washington.
More progressive Dallas citizens
have been heard to say that they
are quite willing to pay more local
tax if it helps the borough. Let's
see.
* * *
At the intersection of Old Main
Road and the highway, above. the
just because
dairy bar, is a continuing highway
project of lesser note.
vania Department of
ambitious flood control project is
a recurring phenomenon, according
to neighbors who check its progress
from time to time, and, while we'd
like to think of it as only a babbl-
ing brook, the all-pervasive odor
indicates that it is either due di-
rectly to, or substantially augment-
A Pennsyl- i
Highways |
grader and four helpers periodically | t
clear the road and edges of an | governmental services; and that the
aggregation of ice and slush. This amount of revenue estimated to be
the wrong end of a quick judo!
course and has incurred a cracked
| rib for the doctor to busy himself
|
with for the duration of the season.
A voice in the distance tells the |
Back Mountain to stop being such |
| a bunch of lousy sports as to pass |
‘Elmer Crane Was
a one per cent wage tax purely in
defense against the Wilkes-Barre
wage tax. | :
The Solce further recommends
that the Back Mountain wait until
next city elections in Wilkes-Barre
to see how fast Mayor Frank Slat-
| tery is voted out of office.
Oh yeah? Just how fast is old
Frank going to be voted out of
office anyway? Should the Back!
Mountain sit around with hands
folded and wait for the great day
some Wilkes-Barre
newspaperman thinks it ought to
come to pass?
And just who says that the wage
“tax will then—if and when, a big
if—be repealed? There is an old
and true proverb that says some-
thing to the effect that a tax passed
abideth forever.
For it was Valley politics that
begat the tax, and as sure as little
green apples were made, it is Val- |
ley politics’ that will continue that
tax unto the twentieth generation
of city fathers.
at home,
and in some cases, I think, it should
Responsibility begins
stay there.
Notice
Notice is hereby given that the
Borough of Dallas intends to enact
an Ordinance imposing a tax of 1%
on the total earned income of its
residents and on all income of non-
residents earned within said Bor-
ough; that, in the judgment of the
Council of said Borough, the im-
position of said tax is necessitated
by the need to reduce long term
indebtedness and to provide more
ample revenues for maintenance
and improvement of streets and
highways within said Borough and
for furnishing other proper local
derived from said tax is Fifteen
Thousand Dollars per fiscal year.
This proposed Ordinance is to be
enacted under the Authority of the
Act of June 25, 1947 (P.L.1145)
and it's amendments.
Walter T. Rowett,
Borough Secretary
‘ago, and disappeared. He answers
to the name of Prince.
It is perfectly safe for a child,
| to approach this dog; because he
| is fond of children.
See classified ad, this issue.
Pikes Creek Man
Elmer G. Crane, 67, died Thurs-
Hospital, where he had been ad-
mitted to the medical service the
previous day. :
Native of Hunlock Creek, son of
Crane, he had spent most of his
life at Pikes Creek. He was em-
ployed by various lumber com-
panies in the Back Mountain.
attended Maple Grove Methodist
Church. :
He leaves a “sister, Mrs. Blanche
Lozier, and a brother William, both
of Pikes Creek. 4
| Burial was at Maple Grove Satur-
day afternoon, following services
conducted by Rev. William P. Ros-
ser from the Bronson Funeral Home.
IT
GIRL
EE
COOKIES q
SUPPORT
"YOUR LOCAL
GIRL SCOUT ®
COUNCIL
bulance to General
Monday, died Tuesday afternoon.
Hospital ‘on adelphia, and Peter, at home; «g
Sg 2
| sisters: Mrs. Addison Ellis, Ch#®*- ©
day morning at Nanticoke General
the late Heorge and Marian Snyder |
He |
The former Betty Mullison was’
daughter of Olin and Maude Rozelle
| Mullison of = Wilkes . Barre.. Her
| father was founder of the Mullison
| chain of stores which merged a
| number of years ago with American
| Stores Company. ;
| She was a graduate of Wilkes-
| Barre Institute and Katherine Gibbs
School, New York.
She was a past president of
Scranton Junior League and a ‘mem-
ber of Wilkes-Barre Junior League.
| She belonged: tozHarveys Lake Boat
Club.
| Church affiliations
Kingston Methodist.
She leaves her husband Burt B.|
were with
nut Hiil; and Mrs. John Rogers, ¢
Ossinger, N.Y. i { A
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 :
estate taxes.
288-2378
“oe
SHAVERTOWN =
140 North Main Street
“9
Back Mountain area
Serving the entire
£
lo hk sre IT