The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 01, 1966, Image 2

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    7 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, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations ait,
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association < ‘
Member National Editorial Association . 2
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. turn
Editor and Publisher .......... ..... Myra Z. RISLEY
Saale seis fr at SMEG Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks
5. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
CATHERINE (GILBERT
BE TEN aE pe Louise MARKS
Business Manager oi. svn: hives Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation Manager ......... Mgrs. Verma Davis
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 responsible for large ‘‘cuts.” If your organization
wants to pick up its cuts, we will keep them for thirty days.
One-column cuts will be filed for future reference.
We will not be responsible 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. :
The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in .local
hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it.
We can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties,
rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a
Editorially Speaking
Associate Editor
Social Editor. ... .. iii.
Pabloid Editor... 0 0%. 80 ov va
Advertising Manager
Ar
LABOR DAY RESOLUTION
BOY scoUTs
GIRL SCOUTS
4-HCLUB
P-TA
UNITED FUND
TEEN GROUPS
CHDRCH GROUPS
LOCAL FONR C I}
COMMINITY Sa PAGS |
Labor Day
How many of us pause and reflect on the significance
of American holidays? To some they are merely a colored
numeral on a calendar, to others an excuse for a long
week-end—when cliff-dwellers take to accident-cluttered
highways to get away from the city streets, when subur-
banites come to the city to celebrate.
On Labor Day we should reflect on significant social
and economic changes—the better standards of living we
enjoy, the shorter work week, the improved working con-
ditions. Today, American families have more leisure
time than ever before.
During this holiday pause, we should consider how
we might invest some of this leisure time toward helping
our fellowman. There is a great personal satisfaction in
participating in organizations like the Boy Scouts, the
YMCA-YMHA, women’s clubs, parent-teacher groups, 4-
H clubs and other similar groups.
Let us show our appreciation to those who have
made Labor Day possible by volunteering to assist our
community in making it a better place to live and to work.
x
¥ ¥
No Stampede For Medicare
There was an uneasy feeling in medical and govern-
ment circles that the elderly now eligible for Medicare,
would inevitably storm the doors of the hospitals and de-
mand admission, waving their Medicare cards, the in-
stant service became available.
The supposition was that senior citizens would seize
upon the opportunitp to get a good rest, with hot and cold
running nurses in attendance, shaded lights, and other
senior citizens in the semi-private rooms to insure com-
panionship and endles gabfests.
The ambition of the elderly to become bedridden was
apparently over-estimated.
The entire trend of hospitals these days is to get the
patient out as quickly as possible, after getting him on his
feet as soon as possible.
Gone are the days when a maternity patient spent
three luxurious weeks lounging around in bed. Doctors
have found that they do much better if they get out of bed
practically at once. Time was when only the “charity”
patients were ushered out - in wheelchairs - at the end of
ten days.
The fact of the matter is that now the early discharge
of patients is an absolute necessity. Space is at a pre-
mium. Emergencies are still provided for, but if you want
just a spot of fancy carpentering, you wait until your
doctor can get you a bed.
As for obtaining a rest cure on Medicare, forget it.
Most elderly people don’t really want a rest cure any-
how. Unless they are really sick, they prefer to remain
in familiar surronudings.
And as for rest - well, what rest do you get in a hos-
pital?
We couldn’t get along without hospitals, but we see
no stampede to take advantage of the Medicare bill on
grounds of rating a vacation after rinsing out the diapers
for the greatgrandchildren.
Who wants to be sick unless it is inevitable?
Only
Yesterday
It Happened
30 Years Ago
More babies at the top of the
page: Eugene Brobst and Tréva
Traver. Eugene hadn't been ' below
third place since start of the Beau- |.
tiful Baby contest, was occupying |
| top place in the August 28th issue, |
| 1936. Treva got enough votes dur- |
ing the preceding week to assure
her of a place on the roll of honor. |
(Those husky thirty-year old men |
in the Back Mountain are doubtless |
chewing their nails off to the elbows
when their baby pictures appear.) |
W. T. Daddow’s clay deposits at |
Lopez led to much activity of the |
Dutch Mountain Brick Co. Test |
kilns were being constructed. Out- |
croppings of coal at the pits. fur-
nished fuel for the steam shovels.
A week of rain broke the drought.
Landon was running well ahead
of FDR in the straw vote taken by |’
the Dallas Post. See coupon.
Irving Roe Jr. and Elwood: Davis
represented Wyoming Valley on the |:
four-man swim team ready to com-
pete in Washington. I
Republicans claimed too many
Democrats were on the WPA pro-
ject in’ Fernbrook, tried to halt the
project.
Dallas firemen made heroic ef-
forts to raise another $100 as the
goal of $700 was in sight, with one
week left to go.
Miss Edith Wharton Dallas, of
Ambler, descendant of James Alex-
ander Dallas for whom Dallas was
named, died aged 85. The original
Alexander . Dallas was secretary of
the treasury and secretary of war
under - president Madison.
Sugar was 10 pounds for 49 cents;
corned beef, two cans 31 cents;
onions, 10 pounds, 22 cents.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Excavating and. foundation work
for the new Natona plant was fur-
ishing employment for sixty people.
Shortage of doors and pipes de-
layed completion of dormitories at
College Misericordia, with opening
of classes also delayed.
Beaumont took. the first play-off
game from Dallas. 6 to 4.
Borough Council instructed police
to enforce an ordinance compelling
residents to have their weeds cut.
Joe MacVeigh was council president.
A spent rifle bullet crashed the
| windshield as Doc Jeter listened to |
Hn exciting game between Boston |
and Philly.
{ Captain Michael Stark was elect-
led principal of Lehman schools, suc-
| ceeding Clarence Boston,
| Future of Jive Junction, Dallas's
| youth center, hung in the balance.
| Group was meeting in Odd Fellows
Hall.
|
Dallas Borough High School, un- |
| able to get equipment, abandoned |
plans for a football team. Lehman
had ‘a squad of 35. :
Tomato blight closed the canner-
ies, Japanese beetles infested Penn-
| sylvania.
ville.
It Happened
10 Years Ago)
The local bank, now a branch of
Miners National, celebrated ite fif-'!
tieth birthday. Ralph Rood, the first |
| bank teller, recollected that the
| bank opened on Monday, August
| 27, 1906, at exactly 9 a. m. Pres-
ident was George R. Wright. First
depositor was John J. Ryman, a
| director. The building was the one
| now occupied by Harveys Lake Light
| Company, built especially for bank-
| ing purpses. Commonwealth offices
| were on the second floor. No elec-
| tric lights. None in town except
| those furnished by the traction
|
|
{
i
|
company.
Hay crop sulted. too much rain.
Fernbrook team took Little
| L éague championship.
| highways.
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER. 1, 1966
3 \
KEEPING POSTED
August 24: SOVIETS LAUNCH Luna 11, a ton and a half
of satellite aimed at the moon.
STATE OF EMERGENCY in Texas, New Mexico
after 10 inches or rain.
STOCK MARKET bounces back.
DeGAULLE STARTS tour, Cambodia first stop.
300,000 Americans now in Vietnam. Ambassador
Lodge orders curfew in advance of elections.
CONGRESS VERSUS WHITE HOUSE on slum
, clearance.
August 25: RED GUARD, youth group spawned by Red
Mao, promises great proletarian revolution in China
Reign of terror.
U.S. LAUNCHES spacecraft from Apollo, to land
93 minutes later in Pacific.
ANOTHER TRAGIC ERROR, U.S. planes drop
Nepalm bombs on their own troops. 7 killed, 22 in-
jured.
August 26: LBJ makes swing around Colorado, Idaho,
Oklahoma. More non-political visits and speeches.
TURKEY'S MEDITERRANEAN coast feels earth
tremors... U.S. mobile hospital in action.
HURRICANE FAITH veers north of Virgin Islands.
CANADIAN RAILWAYS on strike.
TEAMSTERS MAKE BID to organize labor.
. STOCK MARKET at lowest point in two years.
‘August ‘27: BOTH SIDES ‘in Canadian railways strike
stalling, hoping for government to act.
“August 28: RED CHINA'S youth corps (Hilter’s Yugend)
strains relations between Soviet and China. Em-
bassy attacked. :
WAUKEGAN, ILLINOIS, and suburb of Milaukee
scenes of racial distrubance.
DeGualle winds up visit to Ethiopia, received in
royal style, contrast to attitude in French Somali-
land.
August 29: DEMOCRATS SPLIT at high level on high
interest rates. Could be the break Bobby has been
waiting for.
STOCK MARKET takes noth nose dive. Been
ad
| old: pictures, we sure had a good
| culmination, a realization of $1308
Died: Mrs. Rose S. Sarver, Harvey- |
Many drunks picked up on local |
on rampage.
unions.
both taking pix.
or. controlled news.
1
WORLD-JOURNAL- TRIBUNE
Work stoppage of 127 days has already
strangled the time-homored Herald.
going down fairly steadily since February.
CURFEW IN WAUKEGAN eases racial tension,
bayonets greet demonstrators in Milwaukee.
August 30: DeGAULLE IN CAMBODIA.
CHINA REAPS THE WHIRLWIND, Red Youth
still stymied by
U.S. AND SOVIET space ships orbit the moon,
August 31: HURRICANE FAITH erratic, doubled back
on itself, then headed north.
SENATE DEFENSE committe interviews Sylvester
,
Register To Vote
Dates of voter registration in the Back Mountain
|
i If you want a voice in
were listed on the front page in last week's Dallas Post.
your government, a voice in
selecting members of your school board, register.
If you are approaching
ber 8 election.
it is on a Tuesday.
you please, but VOTE.
to register again.
‘When Father Lost
teeth were all worn down from
chewing Penn Fine Cut. He was
proud and grew a beard, but that
didn’t help the shrinking of his
lips. He read an ad in the news- |
paper by a dentist who said he could |
| make false teeth that were perfectly |
fitting and one could eat corn on
the cob or chew tough steaks.
Father fell for the ad and the,
following Saturday he fortified him- |
eelf at Hughey Lawson's Tavern and
went to the dentist and had his
{ worn teeth extracted. He came
My Father was sixty when his
21, make a note of this: Is
your 21st birthday on or before the day AFTER election
day in November? ' The day before your official birth date
is your birthday, whether you know it or not.
This year, you folks approaching maturity have a real
break, because if your birthday is celebrated on the ninth
of November, you are still eligible to vote in the Novem-
This gives you an edge on people who, in
a normal election year, would be out in the cold.
Election comes on the first Tuesday AFTER the first
. Monday. November 1 is not election ‘day, even though
So, don’t use ignorance of the date, and of your quali-
fications for voting, to keep you from registering.
Your vote can swing an election.
Vote for anybody
And to vote, you must be registered.
If you have not voted for two years, you will need
His Uppers
by Hap Hazard | mouth onto the sawdust on the
| saloon floor. He put them down on
a law table and parked himself down
2 the big chair back of the hot
| water boiler and proceeded to have
a little chew before going to bed.
We had a big maltese cat named |
| Jake that was always hungry. Dur-
ing the night Jake smelled some-
| thiny like kilbase or balogna and |
| discovered the teeth and picked
| them off the table and took them
| to his basket under the kitchen
table, Next morning Pa couldn't
| find his teeth anywhere and he
| even went back to the Flat Iron |
| caloon to look for them and came
|
Work was started on Gate of | home in the evening with a bleed- Storm. with - another skinful.
| Heaven school.
Heavy earth - moving machinery |
moved onto site of Jackson Insti-
tution.
‘Water Company laid new mains.
Married: Doris Bush to Carl G. Hen-
ning. Charlotte Dymond to Richard
| Parry. Lila: Sue Tyson to George J.
| Kintz.
Died: Josiah Kocher, 85, Harveys
Lake. William Llewellyn, 74, Miles
Corners. Robert McMillen, 11,
Noxen,
Don’t Foraet Haymarket
Antiques Show Saturday
Saturday is the date of the an-
nual Haymarket Antiques Show,
starting at 10 a. m. in the level
field at Evans Falls adjacent to
Dale Myers’ Restaurant and antique
shop.
A fine time to pick up something
tion, the twenty-first, when the
Auction comes of age,
special for next year’s Library Auc-|
| ing mouth and sore gums, and he |
looked like ten cents worth of god- |
helpus.
He licked his wounds for a couple |
days and tried to chew his tobacco :
but couldn't make it, and that
made him real miserable.
Two weeks later he came home
from the dentist with his store teeth |
and you could hear those teeth!
street. He couldn't talk
should happen to some women) and |
the first time he took a chew of
miserable. All that money wasted. |
He put his teeth in only when |
we had company and he wanted to!
appear more normal in the face,
even under his whiskers.
One sturday night he came home
from the Flat Iron saloon with a
little skinfull and he had his uppers
in his pants pocket. He said he
laughed so hard at a political joke
that he shot his teeth out of his
clattering all the way down the!
(which |
tobacco his mouth felt as if it was |
full of gravel. That made him more
That night we were expecting
| Uncle Will and Aunt Margaret
i and the whole household were hunt-
| ing for Pa's teeth, and there was
helltopay.
| While all this was going on Old
t Jake was in his basket under the
' table. The old man spied him as
it happened to be the time to put
Jake out for an airing (a cat needs
a lot of airing y'know). When Pa
| lifted Jake out of his basket Pa
spied his uppers - clean as a whistle.
The cat had been sleeping on them,
and I guess that’s where the word
“catnap” originated.
Moral: If you have ill fitting up-
| pers don’t let them laying around
‘any old place when there is a cat
| in the house.
| Hap Hazard adds: Ever hear
about that cabin that was plagued
by pack-rats? There was a hunter
sleepin’ there and he put his up-
pers under hig pillow, and a pack-
rat ‘took’ em and substituted a
matchbox,
| toward our fire equipment fund.
.
Suzanne Messick
: Mrs. Martha Jones
| City; three sisters: Mrs. Lotte Kuch-
Safety Valve
MORE RESPONSE ON PIX
Dear Hix:
You undoubtedly have received
many replies on the school pictures
in your tabloid. The piture I am
referring to is the one on the Moun-
tain School in the lower right-hand
corner. The reason I know is there
are three Fitser youngsters in it,
my brother, my sister, and myself.
The date, the nearest I can figure
it, it thirty years ago. I was nine,
so now you know I'm at the Jack
Benny age.
In the first row I will put a
question mark to those I've forgot-
ten: Charles Studinger, Alma Vos-
burg, Marion Scoble, Wilma Ick-|
inger, Lee Cyphers, Laird Frantz, |
Billy Murray, George Parrish, 2, |
Jackie Scoble, George Risch. |
In the second row, the teacher,
Miss Iva Conklin, now residing at
the Home for the Aged in Ransom;
Shirley Fitser, Mary Stevens, Ruth
Fitser, Carolyn Vashing, Audrey
Scoble, Tommy Stevens, Wilbur
Risley, Sharpes = Cyphers, Daniel |
Fitser, and Edward Natt. -
Thank you for putting in these |
laugh. I was so surprised to find
old home ‘town of Carverton.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Robert Nygren
Sweet Valley
IN APPRECIATION
Our sincere thanks to all those
who contributed so much to the
success of the Noxen Fire Company
Auction which was held recently.
A special thanks to the Silver
Sleigh. Paul Coolbaugh, Dale Myers
and the local dress manufacturers
for théir generous gifts. The work
and generosity of our many friends
both here and in other communities
brought the event to a successful
Sincerely,
Mrs. Guy Fritz
Co-Chairman
Wins Certificate
Suzanne Messick received a cer-
tificate of Accomplishment for com-
pletion of the Cadet Officer Candi-
date Cours conducted by the Penn-
sylvania Wing, Civil Air Patrol,
presented after a Parade and Re-
view at Kutztown : State Teachesr |
College August 28. : |
The Civil Air Patrol is an Aux-
iliary of the U. :S.
addition to its Aerospace Rescue
and Recovery mission, it provides
military training and an Aerospace
Education to personnel between the
ages of 13 and 17.
Suzanne is a Cadet 2nd Lieuten-
ant in the Wyoming Valley Com-
posite Squadron Wing which con-
ducts weekly meetings at the USAF
Reserve Facility in Wyoming.
She is the daughter of Major and
Mrs. Irwin Messick, Goss Manor.
Services Today For
Services for Mrs. Martha Jones,
Lake Silkworth, will be held from
the funeral home at 14 West Green !
Street, Nanticoke, this morning at
11, Rev. A. Ward Campbell offici-
ating. Burial will be at Hanover
Green,
Mrs. Jones, 65, died at noon on
Tuesday in Nanticoke Hospital,
where she had been’ admitted on
Saturday.
Her husband, - the late David
Jones, died two years ago. He had
operated a tavern at. Lake Silk-
worth.
: She leaves a son, David, and a
daughter, Mrs. Ruth Radgineki, both
of Lake Silkworth; two grandchil-
dren; two brothers, Edward Stortz,
Binghamton, and John, Atlantic
ta, Lake Silkworth; Mrs. Gussie Rid-
del, Atlantic City; and Mrs. Sophie
Reakes, Nanticoke.
Old Mill Village
Folk Festival Friday
|
| The newly formed Cocoluschu
| Craftsmen’s Association is planning
| a trip by bus to the Old Mill Village
| Folk Festival at New Milford on
Friday.
Present plang are to leave Martz
terminal by chartered bus at 8:30
{’. m, Janet Miller, Luzerne County
Extension office, suggests that peo-
ple who wish to go give her a call
immediately at 825-4596, to find
out if there is room on the bus, or
if perhaps there have not been
enough reservations to warrent a
bus.
The Old Mill Village Folk Feg-
tival will be held the entire Labor
Day weekend, September 2-5,
0d time skills such as weaving,
wood - carving, pottery - making,
spinning, looming, will be demon- |
strated.
New Milford is a pleasant drive
from Dallas,
Not Walle Pines
The recent incident of the burning
cross in Dallas Township took place
in the former Wallo Plot at High-
point Acres and not Wallo Pines,
which is a business place five miles
from the site.
IN MANY DESIGNS
Tabloids ~ Circulars
The Dallas Post
and remember so many, from my.
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From—
Pillar To Post...
by HIX
The cool spell came right on schedule, just as always, on Aug-
ust 25, ready to warm up to a brisk sizzle over the Labor Day wek-
end.
Seemed pretty nice to get out an extra blanket for a change,
after those torrid days and nights.
Pretty nice, too, to se lawnmowers buzzing their way across new
grass, after another summer of drought.
The Back Mountain is green again after two months of baked
earth, breathless nights, and days hot enought to fell a strong man.
The only consolation has been that in Texas it was a lot hotter. By
contrast, whe nyou looked at the projected temperatures on T-V TO-
DAY SHOW, you could feel almost chilly by comparison.
The thermometer is an old thing anyhow. Sometimes the 70 de-
gree reading in the living room inspires you to turn up the therm-
ostat, sometimes to open the door to let a little more cool air before
the sun gets too high and the region starts baking.
Seventy degrees is comfortable in the summer, far too cool in
the winter when the snow starts piling up on the window sills,
Probably it is the power of suggestion. Like putting one hand
in cool water on a hot day. Suddenly, you are cool all over.
In: August, if your porch thermometer read a sixty degrees in
the early morning, you -are perfectly comfortable standing out there
in a sun dress, caning a chair. ‘You, open the kitchen door, and the
kitten frisks in ‘and out, extending a small paw at the dangling cane
as he races past. ?
If it were sixty degrees inside, in ho winter, you'd be calling
the furnace man, and you'd be ‘muffled in sweaters and ski pants.
It must be all ‘a matter of proportion, or maybe self-hypnotism.
Within two weeks, we could have a frost. The first sight of a
whitened roof is enough to send everybody tearing for the service
station to get anti-freeze in the car, though we know there is no __
earthly sense in it until at least mid-October.
It has been smelling like' Indian Summer, not late August, and
not Fall. All except for the one notable scent that is completely. ab-
sent, that of burning leaves. There is even a slight haze in the air.
‘Fall is on the way, summer is over, there is one more big picnic
weekend coming up, and that is it. Finish to a long hot summer.
Within less than a month the first fall coloring wil appear. For :
a time there, it looked as if the leaves would be too dry to turn, but
the rains came, and the éarth has been refreshed. We can look for-
ward to some beautiful fall coloring this year, and to the hope that it
will last longer than it did last year.
Air Force. In|
There is even hope that the drought cycle which had plauged
the region for the past five years, has been broken.
It was touch and go with the hunting season last year.
The
woods were so dry that everybody expected hunting to be banned.
There is no such expectation ‘this year.
That full moon is prevue of the Harvest Moon and the Hunters
Moon, As the season of shorter days and longer nights approaches,
the full moon dominates the night.
By October, the end of it will be shining through leafless
branches. By Thanksgiving, it wil be adisc of stainless steel, remote
and cold as the outer reaches of the universe.
The thermostat in the living room will be registering seventy-
five. and guests wil shiver. They will surreptitiously push up the
needle just a trifle higher.
The fireplace logs will blaze, and send out radiant heat.
The thermometer will register eighty, and it will still not be
quite warm enough, away from the glow of the firelight.
Eighty, during the summer, is something you shun, diving grate-
fully into the cool living room, out of the August heat. :
|
“Everyone’s life is a story; nobody | a
lives without troubles.”
That is the wav Mrs. Boris Jen- |
kins greets the idea that her own
life has been a bit unusual.
| way, because there have been so
many wonderful things to see and
read about, and people to meet.
The beauty of the changing sea- |
sons at Harveys Lake is stored in|
her memory along with the elabo-
rate decorations
Palace. Her eyes now can only dis-
tinguish light from dark.
As a child in White Russia, es,
Jenkins experienced discrimination
and persecution by the government,
which denied education to Jewish
children and tried to" prevent re-
ligious services.
“The Czar,” savs Mrs. Jenkins,
“made a very unhapoy life.” She
still has a scar on her hand re-
ceived at the age of twelve from a
policeman’s club.
Believing strongly that freedom
and liberty were everyone's right,
she joined the thousands of immi-
grants who entered America in the
early years of the twentieth century.
Arriving in New York City at the
age of eighteen, she went to work,
attending night school to learn Eng-
lish. Two years later she married
Mr, Jenkins, a barber and hair
dresser.
After ten years in New York, Mr.
and Mrs. Jenkins. with their four
small children, moved to Wilkes-
Barre. where he established a suc-
cessful beauty parlr. They chose
this area because there were friends
i and relatives in nearby towns.
Thirty-four years ago they bought
property at Harveys Lake, renting
cottages as well as operating a
beauty shop. Mrs. Jenkins herself
of the Czar's:
From Persecution In Czarist Russia
To Quiet Backwaters Of The Lake
by Catherine Gilbert | became a skilled hair dresser. 2
A tour of Europe in 1932 remains
high spot in Mrs. Jenkins’ mem-
| ory. Besides visiting relatives i
| Russia, she saw historic landmarks
in several countries, many of them
She | gestroved a f later durin
has found life interesting all ee oro) oil yours later dating
Although her early education was
limited, Mrs. Jenkins realized there
‘was much she could learn by her-
| self, through reading. She also be~
came fluent in several languages.
Three vears ago her eyesight be-
gan to fail rapidly, damaged by un-
suspected diabetes. The beauty
shon was closed. and her days of
avid reading and voluminous writ-
ing were at an end.
But Mrs. Jenkins has little pa-
tience. with those who waste time
feeling sorry for themselves. She iw
able to walk around the house and
yard, and does the laundry and
cooking. She is proud of her chil-
dren and grandchildren.
Each dav that comes is welcomed
as a gift of God, and she looks back
with pleasure at all the wonderful
things she has seen.
The property at Harveys lake is
for sale now. Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins
expect to do auite a bit of travelling;
there are stiill a lot of places she
wants to see.
Dallas Post Otfice
Closed Labor Day
Monday Sept. 5, 1966 being
Labor Day the Dallas Post Office
will be closed. There will be no
Citv or Rural Delivery of mail.
The lobby will be open from
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. for those
patrons who have boxes in the of-
fice, it was announced by Post-
master Edward Bucley today.
Prescriptions Compounded
Confidentially & Accurately
by only “Graduate,”
“Regisrered Licensed eric”
675-1191
674-9161
675-1192
HALL'S PHARMACY
SHAVERTOWN, PA.
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FERGIE
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