The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, April 28, 1966, Image 2

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    SECTION A — PAGE 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; Out-of-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c.
Member Audit Bureau .of Circulations Site
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association </ Me |
Member National «Editorial Association A:
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Cunt
Editor and Publisher *. . 7... 000 Myra Z. RisLEY
Managing “Editor. ......... LeicHTON R. Scott, JR.
Associate Editor
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks
Social Editor Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Bablotd Editor... .c..... «a. i imei CATHERINE GILBERT
Advertising Manager Louise MARKS
Business Manager .'....... oc... . Doris R. MALLIN |
Circulation Manager ......... Mgrs. VELMA Davis |
Accountinig 0 Ta SANDRA STRAZDUS
Single copies at a rate of 10c Thursday morning at the follow-
ing newstands: Dallas — Town House Restaurant, Daring’s Market, |
Bill Davis Market; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug
Store; Trucksville'— Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy; Luzerne— |
Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone's Grocery; Idetown—
Cave's Market; Harveys Lake Javers Store, Kocher’s Store;
Sweet ~ Valley — Adam’s Grocery; Lehman — Stolarick’s Store;
Noxen Scouten’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern-
Editorially Speaking
MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE
Whether a celestial phenomenon is large or small,
depends upon the point of view.
The harvest moon, rising majestically’ above the hill,
is described variously as the size of a washtub or the size
of a dime. Actually, if you hold a pea at arm’s length
between your eye and the moon, it will be completely
blotted out. :
So it is not too astonishing to folks in the Back
Mountain to discover that the ball of fire which they con-
sidered their own individual property Monday night, turns
out to have been seen along the entire coast.
“#lhe reason folks had time to rush out and have a
look after being alerted by their neighbors, was that the
mammoth meteorite was so high that it seemed to move
vith deliberation.
Camera fans had a chance to train their apparatus,
and on the TODAY SHOW Tuesday morning, there was
the ball of light, apparently snagged on a telephone wire
within easy reach.
; Meteorites used to scare the living daylights out of
primitive peoples, before astronomers passed the world
that there was seldom anything to fear, as showers of
sparks were so far away that they had no effect on the
planet.
Unidentified Flying Objects have taken so much
space in the press recently, that when anything unusual
is seen, it is translated in terms of UFO.
To a world on edge because of the possibility that
the planet itself could be the seat of a holocaust if the
wrong finger touched a button, celestial phenomena are
viewed with more than ordinary interest.
. It might be a good idea tosreflect that any ball of
fire avhich apparently moves slowly enough to ‘menace
the high school or set fire to a woods, simply has to be
| suede jacket, and an overcoat.
| . .
| While he was seeing the sights,
thieves broke a car window and
| went off with the loot.
far enough away to do no damage..
It is all a matter of perspective.
* * *
ENSWER TO PRAYER
They d to call it the Lonely Hearts, but now it
ation Match.” Or is it “Mix and Match?”
Feed your statistics, along with your choices in en-
tertainment, reading matter, favorite colors, into an IBM
machine; and out comes a date.
If you don’t like the date, you can feed him back
into the IBM machine, punch another button, and get
another date..
This has several distinct advantages, as no person-
alice are involved.. None of this pursuti and capture
stuff.
No waiting on the sidelines until some callow youth
comes to the rescue.
~
Clearly, an answer to prayer. :
The drawback to it is that the date can feed YOU
back into the machine with equal ease. But then, there
are drawbacks to everything.
* * *
| Bi-County Loop.
Only
Yesterday
It Happened
30 Years Ago
An old-fashioned spelling-bee was |
| in the making at the Dallas High |
School, with delegations of spellers |
invited from other schools, and |
general information quiz open to |
everybody.
Howard Isaacs lost not only his |
chirt in Washington, but a suit, a|
Dallas Borough Council reduced
its millage from 16 to 15.5.
Conference changes in pastorates: |
Rev. Charles Gilbert from Meshop- |
pen to Carverton; Rev. Harry Sava-
cool from Whitney Point to Trucks-
ville: Rev. Rolland Crompton from
Trucksville to Dorranceton; Rev.
Lynn Brown from Lehman to Moo-
sic; Rev. Howard B. Willetts from
Falls to Lehman. |
Local water-rate squabble went
on and on. Dallas Businessmen's
Association said it would accept the
proposed rate if an adequate supply
were guaranteed.
Sudden death of Mrs. Z. E. Gar- |
inger shocked the community.
Dallas School Board faced the |
possibility of having to adopt higher
millage, upping the rate from 28.5
to 30. |
Shavertown Minstrel cast in- |
cluded Ear] = Johnstone, Arthur |
Evans, Howard Appleton, Dave Jo-
seph, Delores Reilly, and Sam Ol-
iver, heading page 3 in a line of |
one-column pix. |
Married: Mary A. Casterline to John |
VanCampen.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Pastoral changes: Rev. Felix Zaf-
firo from Shavertown to Binzham-
ton: Rev. Howard Matthews, Sha-
vertown; Rev. Charles Gilbert from
Carverton to Maine, N. Y. to be
succeeded at Carverton -by Rev.
Robert Wood.
Teen-Age League enlisted 75
players, all under fourteen years of
age. Tigers, Wildcats, Hill-Billies,
Arrowheads, were «some of . the
teams.
Farmers were crying for help,
very little to be had in spite of high
wages. an all-time high of $4.80.
Daddow-Isaacs team joined the
Noxen students had an all-day
tree-planting session. The project
had been started the year before,
with 2,000 seedlings planted on a
77-acre tract contributed by Dr.
Budd Schooley as a school forest.
Since that time, the acreage had
been doubled, and more seedlings
ordered.
Louise Kunkle was Dallas Town-
ship Queen of the May.
Jackson Township Veterans Club |
wae .ormed with 11 members. Ed-|
| ward Krop was president.
| and candy.
Girl Scouts Wear Not Only A Uniform
But B Proud Tradition Of Service
by Mimi
To the casual
Wilson
viewer, the perky ing
tie, jaunty hat, and green or brown
dress of a Girl Scout is just a ready
means of identification... To. the
youngster who wears it proudly, |
the uniform means something else.
It is a symbol which gives her a
Some
wearing a Girl Scout pin.
sense of belonging—a feeling of money is in short supply, girls may
unity with other Girl Scouts in her | take advantage' of the uniform pool
community, in her country, and | maintained in some councils. These
throughout the world. pools ‘are stocked with the ‘out-
Although early Girl Scout uni- grown uniforms of Girl Scouts who
have
in Scouting.
forms were modeled after the mili-
tary uniform of World War I with
the high crowned,
hat and the kerchief
neck, teday’s Girl
the smart look of
brimmed
the
Scout dress ‘has
current fashion.
large
around money to buy uniforms.
Wearing a uniform is not a re-
| quirement for being ‘a Girl Scout.
youngsters go to meetings
each week in regular school clothes,
When
moved up to another level
Many times adults
make it possible for girls to earn
Girl Scouts can also make their
own uniforms if they prefer—as a
In recent years uniforms and ac-
cessories have been designed by
troop or individual sewing project.
For this purpose, kits including pat-
outstanding fashion experts, includ- |
Mainbocher and Sally Victor,
to keep pace with modern trends.
terns and fabric are available.
Family Night Sunday Bt But whether it’s a purchase or}
rs} ff) . pattern that dresses the girl, she
Trucksville Me hodist is actually wearing a tradition—a
Family Night at the Trucksville | privilege she shares with, all mem.
bers of the Girl Scout organization
from the newest Brownie to the
National President..
Methodist Church Educational
Building is scheduled for Sunday |
from 6 to 8 p.m.
Speakers will be A
Family Service Association, and] Rev. Pillarella To
Rev. Charles Gomer, Chaplain of
Luzerne County Juvenile Court. Present Nominations
Mrs. Ida Lewis, |
Children up to the age of twelve| poo Andrew Pillarella pastor of |
will see a film provided by the | munity United Presbyterian Church; |
il of Churches, a vi ave |
Council of Churches, and will ‘hay | will appear on Saturday at the)
refresh- |
ww entertainn t. ‘als | G .
other entertainment, also | Spring Meeting of the Presbytery |
ments. / :
Le . | of Lackawanna to report as chair- |
Teenagers will meet with the man of the Committee -on Nom- |
adult group, as the program is di-| inations.
rected toward family relations. | He will hear nominations from |
There will be free discussion fol-| the floor of the Presbytery for
lowing material presented by the| Ruling Elders, of which four will
two speakers,
Elwood Renshaw, missing for 20
months, was presumed d=ad over
Japan.
Servicemen: Big Wijock home from
the Marines. Bvron G. Ide, in the
Navv. Paul Carlin, Japan.
Died: Mrs. D. J. Martin. Loyalville. |
Mrs. William Evans,- 71, Shaver-
town. :
All the drugstores were getting
ready for Mothers Day, with cards;
It Happened
10 Years Ago
Front page showed huge lake
trout weighing fifteen pounds, - a
long. Pix snapped by Dean Shaver,
president of Harveys Lake Rod and
Gun Club.
Mrs. Frederick Eck was winner of
the Mrs. Wyoming Valley Contest.
Eisenhower had the biggest lead
of any Republican.
William Evans
his 87th birthday.
Monroe Township was dragging
its heels on the proposed five-way
school jointure, Franklin Township
was lukewarm only.
Two pounds six ounces of pre-,
was celebrating
mature baby rode in state in the .
Dallas ambulance. Mrs. George |
Kostenbauder remained at home in |
Kunkle while her daughter started |
life in an isolette at Nesbitt.
So, it was ten years ago that Hix |
hung her pink bedroom. wallpaper.
How time doeg fly. Nice column, too.
Harry Trebilcox got a Fullbright
award to travel to Austria for study
in Vienna.
Died: Walter J. Brzyzki, 67, Downe)
unds Road.
Married: Betty Furnell to Richard
| Lavelle.
June 14 to 17 meeting of the Synod
| of Pennsylvania to be held in Wil-
son College, Chambersburg.
Immediately following Saturday’s
luncheon, four ministers will be
elected to attend the Synod meeting
ag Commissioners.
Place of the Spring Stated Meet-
ling in in the First Presbyterian
Church of Hallstead, time 9:30. Rev.
John Graves will be moderator.
"be elected as Commissioners to he ~— READ THE TRADING POST ==
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1966
+ KEEPING
April 20: SIX AMERICANS get liberally egged, and push-
ed aboard a plane for Hong-Kong while demon-
strating against the war in Saigon.
QUEEN ELIZABETH
opens Parliament.
first time.
WAR MISMANAGEMENT denied by Secretary of
Defense McNamara.
T-V coverage permitted for the |
POSTED =x
ENE E@EEEN
And hurray.
on her fortieth birthday,
PRICE RISE levels off after February zoom.
* *
*
April 21: NORTH VIETNAM bombed again at vital pass,
after its reopening.
ARTIFICIAL HEART
Dr. DeBakey.
implanted successfully by |
NEW YORK PAPERS headed for third major
strike in three years.
* *
*
Apri] 22: PLANE CRASH in Oklahoma, recruits on way
to Fort Benning, 82 dead.
RUNAWAY KIDS from Fayetteville, N. C. found
13 days later in sealed box-car, alive, hungry,
. homesick.
STEERS STAMPELE
McNAMARA UNDER
ballistic missiles will
through streets of Hialeah.
FIRE, says plenty of bombs,
eventually replace bombers.
MAYOR LINDSAY makes final effort to avert
newspaper strike.
DRAFT LOWERS mental requirements.
SOFT COAL STRIKE
in 12th day, 50,000 miners
off, stockpiles dwindle.
BLOODY FIGHTING in Vietnam, Guerillas stage
mortar attack.
* - ok
*
April 23: UMW, OPERATORS, near agreement.
STRIKE OF NEWSPAPERS certain, newly formed
merger endangered.
DOMINICANS CELEBRATE 1st anniversary of
revolution, yell Yankee, etc., etc., etc.
BODY OF PATIENT with implanted heart lives,
brain blank..
* * 3
24: COMMUNIST MIGS, U.S. in dogfight over
April
: North Vietnam.
x
HEAVY FIGHTING as Monsoon season nears.
* *
*
April 25: HEART PATIENT DIES, but operation a suc-
cess.
AUTO MANUFACTURERS insist Government set
safety standards.
FIRE BALL streaks across sky, southwest to north-
east, great commotion.
WORLD - JOURNAL
- TRIBUNE still unpublish-
ed, strike-bound, strangled at birth. Other New
York papers publish.
*
*
*
April 26: RAILROAD STRIKE in Japan.
TORNADOES IN TEXAS, Mississippi, Louisiana,
snow in North Dakota.
EARTHQUAKE in Soviet Tashkent,
WITHHOLDING TAX upped as of April 30.
* *
April 27: INCREASED AIR
TR QVEVE at
FIGHTING in Vietnam.
CVE VE QE QE QE QE QELS
Better Leishten Neve
ETRE RV
PY :
Sign on the front of Harold | for inadequate sewage disposal !
Kocher’s truck: “If
it's got to be good.”
it's - garbage,
This column has received calls |
from one or two people who now !
feel uncomfortable = about recent
| purchase of a vacuum cleaner at|
‘a very high price along lines of a
“chain” plan, whereby cost is. de-!
| frayed by the customer by giving .
| the seller names of prospects who
| themselvers buy the cleaners and
So on. 3
Those who want to know some-
thing they can do to possibly help
themselves should come ‘to see me
at the Dallas Post office. (Do not
phone.)
* # #*
For those of us who could tear
themselves away from the -meteor
which flew spectacularly across the
evening skies, Monday, there was
the slightly anti-climatic Griffith-
Tiger middleweight fight on t-v,
a rare occasion when the boxing
| moguls consented to throwing a |
biscuit to the public without en-
casing some mediocre spectacle in
the closet of closed-circuit t-v for
the purpose of inflating the kitty.
Griffith more than made up for his!
weight disadvantage by
staying |
point-making the aging
champ. .
Even so, there was good boxing
for a full fifteen rounds, as pre-
dicted, Griffith was understandably |
jubilant at copping the crown, and |
Tiger, of Nigeria, with character-
istic British combination of dignity
an dfaintly belligerent gamesman-!
ship said “afterward that it takes |
jabs at
two to make a fight. |
Attention of the state Health
Department has been turned to the |
condition of the Parrish Heights
| “river”, of which one wonders low
much would be running if it weren't |
|
The U. S. Savings Bonds pro-
gram has been the pattern for
savings bond and stamp projects
| operated by the governments of
half a dozen other nations, which
| have sent officials to Washington
to study and observe our meth-
ods.
ALLEN GILBERT
Insurance Broker
and Consultant
“A Tax-Free Life
Trust Estate for
Your Family” is
their best pro-
tection against
the problems
created by infla-
tion, and federal |
income and §
estate taxes.
Insurance
Dear
¢ : hile flicki | well done.
away from a scrap, while IMCKINg: ,i., Red Engine I felt as safe a
systems surrounding. If investiga-
tions have turned up anything,
they clearly haven't stopped the
smell, which is going to get worse
in summertime, and can only make
the neighborhood mad. |
i # |
Signs of Spring: Lots of yard]
clean-up After-work fishing |
. Brushfires, but not so many
as last year . . . Garages featuring
tune-up specials . . . Gnatty motor-
bikes buzzing Main Street
Late-hour Indian calls on Main |
Street (‘“Yaaa-hoo!”) .. .. © Sunday
round-the-lake traffic bumper to
bumner . .. . Skateboards, but not
sc many as last year . . . Drive-ins |
opening for the season.
Safety Valve
APPRECIATION
Trucksville, Pa.
March 22, 1966
Mrs. Hicks,
|
It is with a great deal of appre-
|
ciation I have for the Fireman of | |
our Township that I feel they de- |
serve a vote of thanks for a job
When I looked at that
being in God pocket. So I hope |
the people in the Back Mountain |
will all try and support these men |
who give their all, they do need |
our help, lets prove our good in- |
tensions, for their efforts. Is this |
to much to ask. Tll try how about |
you all.
Corrine R. Jones
A PLEASURE i
Editor of the Dallas Post
Dear Mrs. Risley:
The Beard of Directors of the
Old Ladies Home wish to thank you
for the fine publicity which you had |
in your paper this past year.
Sincerely,
Ethel N. Smith
Corresponding Secretary
Theme Song, Water
JOHN N. SHOEMAKER
He isn't a native son, but John |
N. Shoemaker of Wyoming has
something powerful going for him |
in the Back Mountain.
John is a nephew of Jane
Schooley, who is now out campaign-
ing for him, supporting him in his
bid for Representative of the newly |
organized Fifth District.
Aunt Jane, Cousin David are solid-
ly behind John Shoemaker.
Running as an Independent Re- |
publican, he is without obligations |
to a party organization.
Asked in an interview at the
Dallas Post, if he expected to go |
on television, his answer was forth- |
right and down to earth: “Can't;
afford it. This way, I'm a free
agent. No strings.” !
His theme song is water and
more water. Clean water, purified
streams, sanitary disposal.
He has seen what happened to |
the streams since his boyhood days
of fishing and camping. In the
last thirty years, he says, the build- |
up of pollution is unbelievable.
He hopes to be the man in Harris-
burg who will take pure water as
his mission, so that the Susque-
hanna and its tributaries will once |
more be clean enodgh to offer
wholesome recreation.
“How did you happen to become
interested in politics?” brought
forth the answer that it was a
natural outgrowth of his work as
Vice President of the Wyoming
Valley Sanitary Authority and serv-
ice on the Wyoming Planning Com-
mission..
With a degree in Economics from
Wilkes College, a graduate degree in |
accounting, plus much experience
in business, he has a background |
of ‘practical financial understand- |
ing of what can and cannot be
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANI
From—
Pillar To Post...
by HIX
It doesn’t take too long to get used to it, but that second day
of Daylight Saving is usually rugged. It is hard to remind yourself,
as you plunge around.groggily in the dawn’s early light, that this
afternoon, by gum, you can get out and dig up the flowerbeds.
Who cares about digging up the flowerbeds, while all you can
think about is that one more hour of shut-eye?
The whole thing is complicated by a grey day which looks earlier
than it is. The clock says it’s time to rise, but th~ shine is missing.
After you get over the first blow, it looks pretty nice to see
puddles in the driveway, and rows of drops glistening along the
twigs of the forsythia.
It's about time we had some rain, otherwise the happy grub-
bing in the garden after work would be entirely fruitless. It is digg
couraging to see those big fat robins gobbling the grass-seed whic
had failed to sprout ‘on the baked surface of the newly spread top-
soil. ,
That Daylight-Saving pitch . . . looks as if it might be har-
nessed at long last. Too many times has one small and stubborn
community, intent upon preserving its individuality, thrown a
monkey wrench into calculations of the driving public..
Draw up to a gas station at 8:30, and lo, the gas station is not
manned. A woman in curlers in the apartment overhead sticks her
head out of the window: “Doesn’t open until eight o'clock,” she in-
forms the driver. The gauge points to two degrees below zero, but
you have to get to the next town before you can make connections
with any high-test gas. : :
This is frustrating. ;
Coming up through the South, one village is humming with
activity, with school children boiling across the highways. :
In the next town, everybody is still in the sack.
There used to be some rugged individualists along the road to
Wilkes-Barre from the Back Mountain, who kept their clocks firmly
set on what they called “God’s Time.”
Which is about as stupid as you can get, considering the time
belts, and the fact that going around the world you either gain
lose a day, depending on which way you are travelling.
When you live right smack on the edge of a time belt, where
clocks are set forward or set back, there is endless confusion, a cir-
cumstance which is made even more harrowing by the fact that a
time belt does not necessarily run in a straight line. There are jogs
in it, goodness knows why, but could be it has something to do Ey
centers of population.
It would be pretty difficult to slice a city right down the middle;
eight a.m. on one side, seven on the other.
At sea, it's easier, or in a plane flying high over the Atlantic or
the Continent. You lose or gain a few hours, set your watch for-
ward or back, and eat at what seem like odd hours.
I know, you never catch up onyour sleep.
Which is one advantage of Daylight Saving.
That hour that you lose in April, you gain again the last Sun-
day in October, when you have one blissful dividend of bootleg sleep,
and rise at what seems like a sinfully luxurious hour, no matter
what the clock says. :
The best time to get used to Daylight Saving is on the road. If
you are sleeping in a strange place, you can wake up much more
easily than when surrounded by the familiar.
Six o'clock, whether the clock says five or seven, seems like a
good time to be up and away, always supposing that it is full day-
light. . . x
By the time you get. to where you are going, you are adjusted
to the time, ready to'fall into bed, ‘and be up and at it the next
morning. {
And so far as
A
rr
| service, he was a clerk at Acme.
| He was at this time an- extension
lature.
Scldier Of Month
Services for Stanley Davis, Shav-
ertown, are scheduled for Friday
afternoon at 2 from the funeral
home at 34 Church Street, Edwards-
ville.
wood Cemetery.
ning at his home. He had been ill
for five years.
Native of Edwardsville, he was
a graduate of Wilkes-Barre Business
College, Scranton Correspondence
School, Carnegie Institute of Tech-
nology, and Temple University. For
thirty-five years he was with the
Sordoni Construction Company, re-
tiring seven years ago.
the Purple Heart and the Medal of
Honor from the United States
Army.
He was former school director
and auditor of Kingston Township.
Surviving are: his ‘widow, the
former Helen Jones; two sons: Don-
ald, Tunkhannock, and Stanley, Oak
Hill; a daughter Margaret, Old
Mrs. Stanley Gibbon,
a sister,
Dallas.
Card Of Thanks
JONATHAN GINOCHETTI
For the second time, Jonathan 2 ? {
Ginochetti was named Soldier of | Mrs. George Wolfe wishes to ox
the Mouth.’ On the first otcasion | press her sincere appreciation to
the Dents eae to him while hel her friends and neighbors who sent
was taking basic training at Fort| oo of kindness during her recent
Enon / ; bereavement.
The ‘second time was recently at oa
Fort Riley, Kansas.
Jonathan postponed his 21st |
birthday celebration from March 26
to May 8, in order to spend it with | =
his family during a ten-day leave.
Many Back Mountain residents |
remember Jonathan from his em-
ployment in the family Fairview
Shoe Store in the Dallas Shopping
Center... When called into the
Burial will be at Mt. Green- |
Mr. Davis, 72, died Tuesday eve-
During World War I he received
Lyme, Conn.; seven grandchildren; |
flowers, cards and performed many |
SEE — HEAR
"CARMEN CAVALLARO
“THE POET OF THE PIANO”
And His Instrumental Ensemble
done.” : : * ’ * 3 .
He adds that it scems to him' Services Friday For Community Sympathizes
| some plain people with plain views i: ; 5
ought to get into the State Legis- Stanley Davis, 72 | The community extends sym
| pathy to George M. Jacobs and
| Mrs. Francis Klaboe, both of Shav-
ertown, who lost their father in the
death on Tuesday momingel
| George Jacobs of Forty Fort.
| CARD OF THANKS
!: The family of the late ul
| Palmer of Noxen wishes to thank
|the community for its whole-
" hearted expreszon of sympathy
| during the recent bereavement. It
| was greatly appreciated.
! PTG Games Party Friday
|" The Parent-Teacher Guild of
Cate of Heaven School will sponsor
a games party on Friday, April 29,
at 8 p. m. in the school auditorium.
The public is cordially invited.
Andrew Lavix is president of the
. Guild and Rev. Michael Rafferty,
' moderator.
]
Antique Show
AND SALE
Prince of Peace 4
Episcopal Church
Dallas
May 3rd and 4th
1l.a.m. to 10 p.m.
| student of Pennsylvania State Uni-
versity..
Alfred D.
We have been a part of
The Back Mountain Area
for over 35 years —
serving ECONOMICALLY
and EFFICIENTLY
BRONSON FUNERAL SERVICE
Sweet Valley
Mildred A.
MONDAY, MAY 2, 1966 — 8:30 PM.
Irem Temple, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
with
THE ORPHEUS CHORAL SOCIETY
Betty Pauling Williams, Director
Tickets available at the following Wilkes-Barre Locations:
Book and Card Mart — 10 South Main Street
Charles n’ Mary Music Company, 35 E. Northampton St.
Square Record Shop — 24 Public Square
Hildebrand Music Company -— 48 East Market St.
“TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT IREM TEMPLE BOX OFFICE
PRIOR TO CONCERT PERFORMANCE
LS TR TER
A
RP RTI TRG
PTR