The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 22, 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: $5.00 a
year; $3.00 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than
six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $5.50 a year; $3.50 six
months or less. 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 and Publisher
ane,
oR,
.
*
Myra Z. RisLey
fissocinte Bditor .... oo inal Mgrs, T.M.B. Hicks
Social Editor. ............. Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Tabloid Editor ......osvenline ius CATHERINE GILBERT
Advertising Manager ................ Louise MARKS
Business Manager ...... APRA ROE 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 ard 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
You Can't Win
It is a long haul until income tax time comes around
again, and the mid-April date in thankfully forgotten in
between the filling out of those awesome looking blanks,
: Well ahead of time, there are some things we would
like to inquire into, in the belief that other people may
be equally puzzled.
One of them is the matter of contributions,
You can deduct to your heart's content for donations
to the Cancer Drive, the Fund for the Blind, the Navajo
Indians, any church, an drive, any organization for send-
ing of red flannel underwear to the Hottentots or elec-
tric refrigerators for the inhabitants of igloos in Arctic,
anv project for saving the wilderness, for clearing the
wilderness, for damming the streams, for undamming
the streams, for saving the starlings, for getting rid of
the starlings.
You name it, you can deduct from your income tax
for contributing to any organization whatsoever, just so
it bears as its title a string of imposing looking capital
letters.
You can even contribute to Communist-inspired or-
ganizations, and deduct, because this is a free country and
your opinions are your own.
But you can't deduct for any personal charity. Try
it and see.
If you know somebody who needs a ton of coal or a
box of groceries, you can contribute it through an acency
which then takes its cut for handling the transaction.
You can’t send it anonymously, just becauss vou
know it is needed. The government does not hold with
any such ideas. Send it if you want to but don’t hother
to mak¢ a note of it on your expense sheet. It will not
be allowed as a deduction.
2 You can’t win. So. send the coal or the groceries
ust because vou enjoy doing a little something for folks.
Forget the deduction.
Not As Easy As It Looks
According to the moon-shooters, the state of weight-
lessness is a heavy burden. This seems to cancel, out all
those wonderful pix of folks on the moon leaping over
obstacles, soaring up mountains by their fingertips, and
otherwise acting as if mounted on automatic pogo-sticks,
Judging from the manner in which the Gemini astro-
nauts perspire while space-walking, all is not what it had
seemed. / ;
From the days of Jules Verne. who first fancied the
nrojectile to the moon and the submarine. up until the
first astronaut stepped out into space and made heavy
weather of returning to his capsule, we have been delud-
ing ourselves about this business of presure and coun-
ter-pressure.
We do know that atmospheric pressure has a direct
effect upon our bodies.
We experience it every time a high pressure mass
moves into the area or a low pressure mass flows in from
the ocean on the wings of a hurricane. That's what we
used to call a Northeaster before we were instructed by
the weatherman.
Ever wonder why your feet swell or your joints feel
too large for their capsules in wet or hvmid weather?
It's the lack of pressure outside. Lack of pressure
permits all your body fluids to swell, including the fluids
in your joints.
When the weather clears, and a hioh pressure airmass
moves into the area. with bright sunshine and a bracing
breeze, vour body fluids resvond, and the swelline goes
down. There's enouch atmospheric pressure to balance
off the inside pressure,
Everybody familiar with what happens to deepsea
divers knows what happens when » diver comes up too
rapidlv from the heavv denths of the seas, Haw could
vou miss it? The T-V screens are filled with divers un-
dergoine decompression in specially built chambers,
Any time you change your environment drastically,
you are going tn pay for it.
Like the folks who fly halfwav around the world in
a plane, eat at odd times, lose their proper sleep, upset
their built-in mechanisms of behavior patterns,
Jt takes awhila to get hack ta normal living, re-set
the clncks, and make up for lest sleen.
If you are accustomed to eating nothine hefora noon,
and are suddenly confronted with a five conrse dinner at
3 a.m. you are out of whack without realizine it.
Those astronauts whizzine round the elobe, sunset
and sunrise collidine with each other in mid-space, are
up acainst something which is just as exhausting as
weightlessness.
Train yourself to wake up at 6 a.m. without an alarm
clock in one section of the country, and see what happens
when you move two time zones to the west.
SAVE ON PRINTING COSTS. BUY FROM THE POST
FOR YOUR NEXT PRINTING JOB, CALL THE POST
asa A
on EASA |
N
\
Cyuat
| Street was breath-taking.
‘| the
| under the 100F building,
Only
Yesterday
It Happened
30 Years Ago
Mrs. Sawyer, Dallas, took fifteen
prize ribbons at the flower show
in Plymouth. Her garden on Church
Sacred Heart Monastery at Har- |
veys Lake, swept by flames in 1932 |
and again the following year, was
supposed to be rebuilt. Father
Lawrence Brigmanas, was spear-
heading a move to rebuild. The
monastery had been used for re-
treats.
Rival factions in the GOP were |
scrapping it out. Reason: invi-|
tations to a rally in Kunkle were |
delayed in the mail, Scrap or no |
scrap, they were all united behind |
the candidacy of Alfred Landon. |
Two Noxen babies were: featured |
in ‘the beauty contest, Anna Mae |
Space and Frances Lord. Interest
heightened as the September 26
deadline approached. Jerry Elston
still led the field. :
Six kids were accused of ten
petty robberies in the Dallas-Sha-
vertown area. Names withheld. |
Donkey baseball coming up, an |
innovation for Dallas. i
Harveys Lake Quoit Team took
championship of the Rural
League. ;
Wyoming County Fair was in
full ery at Tunkhannock, with an
auction sale of cattle scheduled,
Howard Sands auctioneer.
Ted Loveland, star of Kingston
Township 1935 football team, broke
his shoulder in a varsity vs. alumni
game. Alumni took the varsity 6-0.
Loveland in 1935 was voted most
valuable player in the conference.
You could get 10 tall cans of
evaporated milk for 69 cents. Ba-
nanas were two dozen for 29 cents,
onions 5 pounds for ten cents.
Died: Mrs. Charles Weiss, 61, Hunts-
ville. Mrs. Mary Graves Hess; 57,
Demunds.
Reunion: Barringers and Travers;
Joseph Hoovers; Barnard-Keiper;
Billings-Harris; Joseph-London. |
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Harry Harding, Trucksville, was
injured in an explosion in his base-
ment workshop. |
Hunters were advised they
couldn't shoot a doe if they had:
already bagged a buck. -
Paul Stoner had
pumps and a crew of men working
on the installation of a corrugated
drain pipe to harness Toby's Creek
]
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1
Work was going fine on the Na-
two power |
tona Lace plant. Four disabled vet-
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1966
EE ESSE IEEE NEE EEN
KEEPING
EES NIE NEE EEE ENE EE EYE
September 14: WASHINGTON PRAYS for rain, gets
seven inches.
MOLLY GOLDBERG
STUDENT DEMONSTRATIONS
quelled by military.
SNOW IN COLORADO.
* *
*
POSTED
dies at 66.
in Argentina,
September 15: LBJ SIGNS wage hike bill,
SCHOOLS IN GRENADA closed temporarily to |
await developments.
ASTRONAUTS SPLASH down after successful
flight, right on target.
GERMAN SUB SINKS in North Sea, 19 lost, one
survivor.
SENATE FILIBUSTER continues,
U.S. EXPANDS AID to Philippines. Presidents LBJ
and Marcos have discussions.
TWO MINE DISASTERS, three miners lost in
Schuykill, three in Ohio,
* *
September 16: BODIES OF 12 FLYERS found in Green-
land, presumably from a January 1962 U.S. plane
crash.
STUDENTS MUST BE PROTECTED rules Federal
court.
KUNZUA DAM DEDICAED, a monument to the
breaking of an Indian treaty guaranteed in per-
petuity by George Washington. Supreme Court |
*
ruled Indians were subject to eminent domain as |
well as other people.
waters of the Allegheny.
* *
i
Dam will help control head-
*
September 17: U, S. ARTILLERY gets our own men in
Vietnam.
RUMOR THAT 25,000 U.S. troops in Thailand.
PREMIER KY says no longer necessary to invade
North Vietnam.
*
* *
September 18: PHILIPPINE’'S PRESIDENT says Indo-
nesia might consider mediation in Vietnam, speak-
ing over a Meet the Press network.
DEAN RUSK back on feet, in action again.
*
* *
September 19: LUTHER KING in Grenada to lead March.
POPE PAUL APPEALS to world to end war in
Vietnam.
HURRICANE SEASON, but nothing cooking.
U.S. TROOPS leave Dominican Republic, no tears,
no cheers.
*
*
*
September 20: UNITED NATIONS general assembly be-
gins. Its 21st year.
U THANT says might stay if necessary unti] end
of the year.
NORTH VIETNAM
bombed.
arteries . of supply again
KING LEADS children to school in Grenada.
SURVEYOR STARTS TRIP to moon, nice launch
after slight delay.
SITUATION IN THAILAND discussed in closed
session, Senator Fulbright and General Bundy.
Bases used for bombing North Vietnam:
AFGHANISTAN HEADS U.N, Hopes expressed
that U Thant will submit to draft for Secretary-
General.
*
* *
September 21: SURVEYOR SPINS in space, out of control,
UNITED NATIONS hears Marco of Philippines,
FORD INCREASES prices.
GALE WARNINGS up, Northeaster moving into
Atlantic states, Hurricane Hallie an infant off
Vera Cruz.
STOCK MARKET continues long skid.
| to the former Kay Ann Harvey
.the public that former Assistant
| and a case with which he had no
| perience that he was fair,” truth-
epovea in onsimcion.'Treats In Children’s Books At
Dallas Legionnaries licked Jack-
| son 6 to 2.
Newell Wood was Republican |
candidate for Senator.
Sammy Hess, 2, fell out of his!
| father’s car near the Martz farm,
| Died: Harry Swithers, Trucksville.
. | Infant Pritchard, Shavertown. W.
| G. Allen, 86.
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| Nichols to Frank J. Besecker.
| swing, top of front page showed !
‘merly of Shavertown. Mrs, Florence.
and into the path of another. He
was at Nesbitt with a fractured |
skull.
Still listed on: the front page,
those killed in action in World War
II
Married: Betti Welsh to William
Hanna. Hannah Mae Gibbons to Jo- |
seph Patrick. Selma Benjamin to
Benjamin Winogrodski. Josephine
It Happened
10 Years Ago
Drive on drunken drivers in full
cops atopping motorists on Mem-
orial Highway, Much wrath on the
part of Lake tavern operators, talk |
of boycotting Dallas Post. Kingston |
Township cops not permitted to join |
the drive. Question arises, why not?
Less that 24 hours after the
campaign started, a -Wilkes-Barre
Township man going 90 miles per
hour, was killed near Memorial
Shrine. Another drunk, 17, wrecked
a new car near the Payne farm,
Clark Lewis, Dallas Township
junior, took second place in dairy
cattle judging at Springfield, Mass.
Annual migration of red-wing
hawks over Plymouth Mountain.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hewitt ob-
served their Golden Wedding. Also
Mr. and Mrs. William. Sorber.
Free polio shots for all children.
Ed Johnson again headed the
Bird Club, Hix was secretary.
Early. frost hit some spots, skipp-
ed others. Andrew Hardisky, Cen-
termoreland reported a mammoth
apple crop, branches bending to
the ground, when other orchardists
in that area were wiped out be-
cause of late frost. Keller's flowers,
warmed by Lake winds, were not
frost-nipped.
Died: William Cobleigh, 70, Dal-
las. Ilalou W. Robideaux, 48, for-
Steele Myers, formerly of the Lake.
A few of the treats in children’s
books waiting at Back Mountain Me-
morial Library, are listed by Mrs.
Martin Davenport, librarian,
Many more books for children
are on the way. The ones already
received make a colorful stack on
her desk, all ready to be put into
circulation in the children’s annex.
Mrs. Davern writes:
‘Did you ever hear of ‘rolling
the cheese?” We never did until
we read Patricia Martin's delightful
| little book ~ about this game that
really did take place in San Fran-
cisco, on Sundays long ago.
And what about ghosts who go
to school? And bulls who sit on
balconies? And Joey, the little,
timid, awkward kangaroo, who loses
‘| his parents and learns to fend for
| himself ?
Did you ever think you would
see a rhinoceros with a bird on his
shoulder or on the top of his head?
You may. Read Olive Earle's in-
teresting little book “Strange Com-
panions in Nature,”
Another fascinating book is ‘Sea
Horses” by Lilo Hess. - One of the
oldest creatures dwelling in the
| oceans of the world, this tiny animal
with the horselike head and sea-
monster tail has always had a fairy-
tale appeal for children.
For all of you young people (some
of us older ones, too?) who still
believe in wishing, Sesyle Joslin has
written a practical guide to wishing !
called “Pinkety, Pinkety.” Da you
still wish on the first evening star,
Services Today At 2
For Beatrice Edwards
Services will be held this after-
noon at 2, from Disque Funeral
Home for Beatrice Edwards, 68,
who died Tuesday morning in Mercy"
Hospital. :
A Dallas resident for the past
16 years, Miss Edwards was born
in Plymouth and lived in Kingston
and Edwardsville. She was a mem-
ber of Dr. Edwards Memorial Con-
gregational Church.
Surviving are a brother, David
Edwards, Detroit, Mich., and sister,
Mrs. Helen L. Harrison, Dallas.
Rev. Russell Edmundson, Shaver-
town Bible Church, will officiate, |
‘burial in Fern Knoll,
psa
Back Mountain Memorial Library
of Clinton."
upon observing a white horse, on |
breaking a wishbone? If you do, |
this little book will tell you the
magic words to use.
|
>
“His name was Chester Filbert. |
He lived at 5264 West One Hundred |
and Seventy Seventh Street. And
as far as he could see, nothing ever
happened where he lived. He longed |
for marching bands, haunted houses, |
ferocious lions and tigers, monsters,
astronauts, even fireworks. |
“What did he have? Nothing.
Nothing that he could see.”
But if you come to the children’s
annex of the Back Mountain Me- |
morial Library, Mrs. Edwards or |
Mrs. Crump will be happy to loan |
vou “Nothing Ever Happens on My
Block” by Ellen Raskin, and maybe |
you can spot a few things Chester |!
Filbert missed.
(Mrs. Davern might have added |
that the illustrations in ‘Pinkety |
Pinkety” are fantastically beautiful. |
Mrs. Emma Smith
Dies At Niagara
A former resident of Beaumont |
was buried in Niagara Falls Mon- |
day afternoon. with a number SR
INVEST? YES
Who, Me? Yes
Call or Write
people from this area present at!
the services, followed by burial in |
Acacia Memorial Park. !
Mrs. Emma Smith, 64, who died |
September 17 at Niagara Falls. was |
widely connected in the Back Moun- |
tain. i
She was the youngest of twelve
children of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
| have been Honorably i x .
and served since August 5, 1966 Native Of Fairmount
| are
' this chance to become one of us:
| Again, it has been my honor to
| be Commander of such a great Post.
Home On Leave
SEAMAN JOSEPH MILLER
Seaman Joseph J. Miller has com-
pleted ten weeks of basic training
at Great Lakes, Illinois, and is home
on leave. Y
At the termination of his leave,
he will continue training at Charles-
ton, S.C. where he ‘is assigned to
USS Destroyer * Everglades.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Miller; East Dallas, he is married
of Bunker Hill. Both he and his
wife are graduates of Dallas Senior
High School.
While at school, Miller played
on both the baseball and the foot-
ball teams.
Safety Valve
LEST WE
MISUNDERSTAND
Dear Editor:
For several weeks I have been
trying to get the story across to
Chief Alexander McCullough resign-
ed his position in Dallas Borough
to accept employment at Glen Mills
Industrial School, the type of work
that “Sandy” was formerly engaged
in.
It is regrettable that a misunder-
standing may have caused that de-
cision. Several weeks ago Mr. Mc-
Cullough was quoted in an article
connection nor did he make a state-
ment on the same. ~
Many were sorry to hear that he
had resigned. It has been my ex-
ful and on the job. If this letter
will help to rectify matters then it
has served its purpose. '
When this gentleman has a home |
here it is a shame that he has to |
work out of town. |
Dorothy B. Anderson |
TO OUR VETERANS
{
Dear Pellows: |
|
|
On September 1 President John-
son signed Bill No. HR-17419, This |
is one of the most important bills | —
DALLAS, PENNBYLVANIA
From—
ill P
Pillar To Post...
by HIX
So, caught you napping! Fall doesn’t start until tomorrow, in
spite of what you learned in school.
Ralph Rood used to straighten us out on these things.
“Fall can start as late as September 23,” he pontificated, ‘and
spring can start as late as March 23. The Arbitrary dates of Sep-
tember 21 and March 21 are approximate only.”
So, the Autumnal Equinox this year is on Friday, instead of in
the past tense. ’
. Officials at the Dallas Rotary Club Fall Fair were chewing their
fingernails on Saturday. ‘What can you expect?” they mourned,
“It’s an equinoctial storm coming up.”
“Nonsense,” we encouraged, “it's going to be a beautiful day
and so is tomorrow. We have a direct pipeline to the weatherman.”
“But what about the Equinox?”
“That Equinox is not due until Friday, and we won't get any
rain out of it until at least Tuesday. And then, let it pour.”
Each day, it is just a bit darker in the morning, and night
comes a bit sooner,
Over the period of a week, there is a perceptible difference in
the shadow cast at noonday by the big maple at the entrance of the
driveway. Little by little, it has crept up the drive, so that now the
car stands in the shade at lunch time instead of in the glare of the
sun. B %
There is a bluer cast to the far hills, a nip in the air, and a feel-
ing that summer is really over. ) : g /
It has been the hottest summer for years. Doors which have
usually been closed at night against the early morning chill, have
been permitted to stand gratefully open, to collect all the, coolness
possible ‘as a bulwark against the scorching heat.
A mere whisper of breeze through the house during the daytime
has kept the interior delightfully cool.
There’s something about a double-planked house that withstands
the heat and the cold. An Equinoctial storm may be roaring outside,
but unless you look out the window, you'd never know that the
branches were lashing and the gutters flooding. 4
Unless you go up into the attic, you can’t hear the rain on the
roof.
On the tin roofs in Old Baltimore, during a sudden summer
shower, the rain drummed deafeningly. It was a lovely soothing
sound, bringing promise of relief from heat that settled like a blanket
over the brick pavements and the bricked yards and the bricked red
rows of houses and the cobbled streets.
There was no escape from the heat except for those sudden
reprieves when the rain washed the roofs and the storm drains car-
ried the heat down to the Great Bay for a brief interval.
Here in our green hills there is no such heat. Maybe we get a
little hot under the collar when the temperatures soars into the
nineties, but there is never such a thing as not being able to sleep
at night, 2
And now, summer is over, and fall is already here, no matter
what the calendar says. : 3
We almost had frost a couple of nights ago. Folks were out
cutting their flowers when they saw that clear green band of light
close to the horizon at sunset. Places in the high Poconos got a
little.
Frost has a way of skipping some places, settling on others.
Around the Lake, with warm air rising during’ the night from the
water, the frost holds off, while in fields a mile distant, the ground
ig white.
That first frost, when smoke rises from the roofs, lapped up by
the early morning sun . . . that's a milestone in the year.
A preamble to rushing out at midnight after a warning over
the T-V, to search for an all-night service station, =
And that, brother, is where an air-cooled engine lets you sleep’
nights. Tt can't freeze up and crack the engine block.
At this point, the sun is rising and setting in the same spots it
selected for its rising and its settings away back at the time of the
Vernal Equinox in March.
And it would be a nice idea if we could get rid of Daylight Say-
ing at the end of this month instead of the end of October. It's that
morning gloom that gets everybody.
Fine all summer, but summer’s gone.
Or will be tomorrow. : #
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ever signed, as all Veterans who Wesley Robert Jackson 2 Forrest H. Still, 62,
Discharged
now being accepted in the
The American Legion, We at Post
672 are really happy that we can
| welcome all the Veterans from the |
Vietnam war.
Dies In Connecticut
Wesley Robert Jackson, 46, Hun- |
| after a long illness.
Native of Fairmount Township, |
| : in; | Forrest H. Still, 62; formerly of
| world’s most powerful organization, Jock Creek RD 1, died Sunday night | Shavertown, died last Wednesday
| at Nanticoke General, where he had at his home in Bridgeport, Conn.,
been a patient for several days. :
: Son of Mrs, Daisy Still and the
{he was son of Elisha and Tracey. late Harry Still, the Back Moun-
The American Legion has worked | Detrich Jackson. For the past four- tain native lived in Virginia before
very hard for the Bill and we are | teen years he lived at Hunlock. |
i hoping you will take advantage of | He had been employed at Retreat
| State Hospital. l
In closing let me thank you for |
the past years. On October 8 your |
new Commander will take over. |
|
Thank you,
Curtis F. Bynon i
Commander, Post 672 |
American Legion
Loses Brother In Death
Sympathy of the community is |
etxended to Mrs. Henrietta King |
whose brother, Henry E. Schimmell, |
Jr., suffered a fatal heart attack | dedicated Sunday at 10 a. m. at
Franklin | Idetown Church, and 11:15 at Leh- |
| Roosevelt Junior High School in! man. Rev. Winfield Kelley, pastor, |
| Hyde Park. He was head teacher will conduct the services. : 1
| and head of the science department. |
Friday morning at the
he
Native of Nanticoke,
coke High School.
| anne and Wesley Jr.
Park, Bloomsburg, Wednesday after-
| noon, following services conducted -- a
!by Rev. E. P. Murphy, pastor of |
| Church of Christ,
| from the Clark Piatt Funeral Home.
Hymnal Dedicaticn
grad- | of the new edition are being put
uated in the class of 1947, Nanti- into service throughout the country |
! this year.
ago.
Surviving are his widow,
his mother
moving to Connecticut 10 years
: : a the
He leaves his widow, the former | former Mary Eroh; children William,
Dolores Gregory; two children, Jo-| Donald and Winifred, all of Bridge
at home; : ; : y
nome; | port; five grandchildren; two great-¥
brothers and sisters, Mrs. Oliver | grandchildren: 2
| Meade, Mrs, Edith oRsencrans, and | brother George, Bridgeport,
| James Jackson; all of Sweet Valley. | | Following services in Bridgeport eo
and
He was buried at Elan Memorial | burial was in Fern Knoll Friday
| afternoon.
Sweet Valley, |
{
New Methodist Hymnals will be!
Approximately 2,000,000 copies J £\
Sayre of Beaumont. |B
She leaves her husband Harry:
children: Harry Jr. Robert, and
Mrs. John Nocero, all of Niagara
Falls: Jonah and William, Tona- |
wanda, N. Y.; sixteen grandchildren |
and one greatgrandchild; sisters and
brothers: Mrs, James O'Boyle,
Kingston; Mrs. Betty Seltzer and
Mrs. John Wich, Wilkes-Barre; Mrs. |
William Naugle Sr, William and
Thomas Sayre, Pikes Creek; Walter |
Sayre, Trenton, N. J.; Mrs. Ray- |
mond Marsa. {
Her “eldest brother Clinton of |
Beaumont, died in April. A nephew |
George Sayre, elder of the Seventh |
Day Adventist Church in Beaumont,
was fatally burned in an explosion
some years ‘ago. He was the itis
i
HENRY H. OTTO, JR.
| Sergeants
SENTRY
COLLAR
FOR DOGS
Kills Fleas
FOR 3 MONTHS
AIDS iN
Your Local | ;
REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE Tick Control
e. ecla mm
For NECK AREA
J. H. Brooks & Co.
15 So. Franklin St. - Wilkes-Barre, Penna. :
Member of the New York Stock Exchange
since 1905
Phone 823-3131
"1.98
- EVANS
| DRUG
STORE
__ Shavertown
or 675-1265 “ we | E
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be fo
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