SECTION A — PACE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established I 889 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. Qut-of-State subscriptions, $5.50 a year: $3.50 six months or less. “Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations ee, Member’ Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association ST Member, National Editorial Association ID # - | \ Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Managing Editor and Publisher Fditor “i... Ras TA AN CR a Sqcial Editor Sports Editor Tabloid Editor ........ cS, Advertising Manager Myra Z. RiSLEY Mgs. T.M .B. Hicks Mgs. - FREDERICK ANDERSON Mgrs. Doris MALLIN CATHERINE GILBERT Louise MARKks * * * TRIBUTE TO NORTI BERTI Ten years ago a man who could not be spared, died in the prime of life in Dallas. ; ; He could not be spared, because Dallas was his own, his love, his friend. Norti Berti had dreamed of being Burgess of Dallas. He took it seriously. When other less direct men would have taken legal steps to remove a sign which was erected on the highway in Dallas in violation of a Borough law, Norti simply went forth and took it down. The circumstance that the sign was that of a wealthy and well-known motor dealer in Wilkes-Barre, meant nothing to him. He was not about to be bulldozed into permitting a violation of the law of his community. Norti was always on tap. Call him up in the middle of the night to say, “Norti, I smell smoke, can you come over? Could be it isn’t anything, but could be we need the fire department,” Norti was there in three minutes. And in three minutes more, crawling under the back porch to check the bottom of the fireplace chimney Sra “It isn’t hot, so it isn’t here,” and another minute to in- spect the living room fireplace where a thin and acrid vapor was creeping out along the hearth. A dash to his car, and a return with a crowbar. Bricks stacked up on the hearth, and a smouldering beam uncovered. A bucket of water, and it was all over. Outraged refusal of a check for services rendered. “Of course you can't pay me, Mrs. Hicks, you're my friend.” ; That was Norti. He was a friend of every living soul in Dallas. When be died of a sudden heart attack, the news spread like wildfire, and Franklin Street was jammed with cars. It couldn't be that Norti had died, and every- body went in person to find out. The Dallas Post published an obituary that a captain of industry could not have commanded, no matter how rich nor highly placed. The paper ran the picture which had been used on a former occasion when Norti sat for a pen portrait. It ran a proclamation signed by the president of the Borough Council. It ran an editorial, and it ran a heart-felt Pillar to Post. : The flag in central Dl: flew at half staff. At his funeral, the Ballas fire apparatus; creeping along behind the hearse, bore the floral offerings, tribute to a fallen chief. ; : Norti was the embodiment of the American Dream, the boy who had been born in a humble home, who had dedicated his life to his chosen community, who felt no sense of inferiority in his occupation and his business. Norti was loved .by everybody in Dallas. ¥ Xx ¥* AMAZED AND DAZED Republicans nationally were amazed at the selection by Presidential candidate Richard Nixon as his running mate of a man who has been described as one who would “do no damage to the ticket.” ig 7 As David Brinkley put it over the NBC airwaves, Enthusiasm for the ticket is something less than over- whelming.” This was immediately after the announcement was made that Governor Agnew of Maryland had been tapped for the second position on the slate. It is impossible not to note the connection between the about-face of Governor Agnew in putting Nixon's name in nomination, and the eventual naming by Nixon of his running mate. What was abundantly obvious was the uproar of feeling for John Lindsay, that dynamic young Mayor of New York, who was selected to place the name of Gover- nor Agnew in nomination for the vice presidency. For a time there, Thursday night, it looked as if a convention might be actually about to speak its mind, but the brief revolt came to nothing. There had been no time to organize it. T-V viewers who had been about to doze off during the endless speeches by what seemed to be endless politicians, all anxious to get their faces and their names before the public, were galvanized into life or a reasonable facsimile thereof, when rumors flew that another name would be placed in nomination for vice president. If it had been John Lindsay who was named, the chances are that the personal magnetism of the Mayor of New York might have swept him over the top. But no presidential candidate can afford to be over- shadowed by his running mate. It would be difficult to keep Mayor Lindsay in the background. Time is on his side four years from now, or eight years from now. Four years ago, when he was Mayor-elect of New York, the Dallas Post had this to say of him: “The Mayor-elect of New York has the same irre- sistible charm with which John Fitzgerald Kennedy was blessed, a youthful ebullience which has the power of a magnet. “Nobody who saw him on television, or later in pic- tures in post-election newspapers, could fail to respond to that love of life, that clear-eyed eagerness to be up and at it. “One special picture stands out, the one snapped while he was exuberantly clasping his hands over his head in the sign of victory, shouting his joy at winning the election, his face matched by another wide-open face, that of a Negro in Harlem. j “Too long has New York been ruled by politicians who measure their smiles of approval in direct ratio to favors received. “Let us have more people who can laugh or cry, who are not ashamed to register honest emotion. “For our money, John V. Lindsay is headed upstairs. It is the man, not the party, who counts when the chips are down.” | sludge Only. Yesterday It Happened 30 Years Ago Noxen Tannery started work on a new sludge pit. The new em- | bankment __ THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1968 PeUEgEEEEEINgEREEEEAE KEEPING POSTED CERN ENNENEREFEERFERRE BER was to be ‘used as a dumping ground for refuse from the | operations. Hides | day reached 500 was carted at times. away by area produced per | The | farmers who found it rich in fextili- | zing factors. lof Williamsport new pit. was The Odell: Company building the Arthur B. Ide, 72, descendant of pionecrs who first moved to this | area, died at, 72, patriarch of wide- | spread family. A WPA worker was three loads of garbage because he fined by | Chief Stevenson, condemned to haul | | dumped garbage alongside the road. i This was part of the Lake Chief's | clean-up campaign. A letter to the editor (unsigned) mid the paper was all wet in p2int- | ing the finger ‘at the insurance companies for delay in settling for {the Trucksville ‘grade school fire. Said it was delay .oni the part of the school board in getting plans laid for construction. the insurance | company couldn't settle until it ‘got an estimate of cost of replacement. New supervising principal at Dallas Borou¢h school® was ‘A. T. Williamee. A new teacher. Leona Kinocley, ‘was hired at a salary of | $1170. Mrs. Hiram Wilson. at 87. said to an interviewer from the paper that her biggest complaint was that che could no longer. work., She had | | lived on a farm near Lehman and | knew how to do everything on it. | “Used to hoist a bag of grain to my shoulder and walk right off { with it,” she mourned. | ~ Mrs. Laura M. Stiles, 67, died | in Noxen. | Year's first drowning at Harveys | Lake; 16-year old Ashley boy. Wil- | iam Morgan, in deen water cff | Wardan Place. Sudden drop-off | panicked: the boy. | An’ editorial pointed out ‘that | WPA works were fine as a stovgap. | but that a program which permitted | men to loaf on the job was not | realistic. That it took ‘modern | methods and modern equipment to | build a good road. | was 11 and .7 tenths miles of Moun- | tainton White Haven Road. Nor- | man Johnstone. Wyoming Valley | RA 1 OS fi 4 | Motor, Club. statediif would. take | ten vers to build™it by hand. | Married: Lillian. Rood to Wesley Oliver. It Happened 20 Years Ago Case in point | | | | | { Mount Olivet Cemetery at Car- | | verton and’ Mother Cabrini Church | | were dedicated with pomp and cere- | mony, Bishop Hafey | many priests. people. Solemn novena to Mother Cabrini was instituted. Petitions were assisted by | Audience of 3,500 | circulated _ in | | Kingston Township to change traffic { | lights. Wanted completely auto- | matic signals instead of semi-auto- | matic. System required getting out | | of car to press the button at Cen- | ter Street. Blcomingdale growers pceting a big crop. Goodleigh Farm won the contest | for good pastures in ° | County. Architect's drawing of new Am- erican Legion Home on Highway. Maple Grove Methodists were ob- | serving 75th anniversary. Mzrried: Ann D. Heylmun to H. Keith Elston. : ’ ; Anuiversarv: Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baer, Golden Wedding: 10 Years Ago LADY of the Lake beauty contest | was coming up, with 25 glamor girls | competing for the crown. Norti Berti, Burgess of Dallas, and | dear to the hearts of everybody in the community. died of a sudden | heart attack. He was only 45 years | old. Flags flew at half-staff. a | prorlamation was issued by Sterling Williams, president of the Borough | Council, and the Dallas Post car- ried an obituary, an editorial. and | | a Pillar to Post, all paying tribute to a man who exemplified the great | | heart of a great nation. A hum- | ble man by wordly standards. Norti | was the American dream. Drowned in an icy Alaskan river | was a 19-year old Ruggles Hollow | boy, Clifford Wilkes.” The grim dis- | covery of his body was made two weeks after he was reported miss- ling from his Fairbanks rooming house. the summer construction season | with companions Carl Hackling, | Howard Shook, and Harry Sickler, | travelling the Shook’s car. to Hershey to plowing contest. ! Died: W. O. Washburn, 89, promin- eént insurance man, former resident | of Dallas Township, in Florida. Mrs. | Julianna Szabo, 74, Harveys Lake. | George Jablonski, 68, Shawanese. | Mapried: Eleanor M. Ditton to T. shepherd Moore. Shirley Myers to Thomas M: Tobin. «Marilyn Moore to Jesse A. Moffet. Rose Cressman to /fhomas Saunders. Isabelle Ellen He had gone to Alaska for | were ex- | Luzerne | | 1 | | | August 7. REPUBLICAN CONVENTION sees balloons released for Nixon; Reagan and Rockefeller, sits through eight hours of seconding speeches for non-candidates, dozes, comes to life, goes out for a hot dog, raises a furore when a favorite son is named, caucuses in air-conditioned rooms, rolls inexorably toward nomination of Richard Nixon as Republican candidate for President of the United States. IN MIAMI GHETTO, black violence erupts as Con- vention moves ponderously at Miami Beach. State Troopers called out. Dr. Abernethy goes to scene looting, burning and shooting and pleads with rioters to cool it. * * * August 8: NIXON NOMINATED in early morning hours. Governor Agnew of Maryland, defecting from the Rockefeller ranks, puts his name in nomination. LOOTING AND BURNING continues in Miami, two by four mile area sealed off, National Guard moves in, curfew imposed, tear gas used. Two killed. NIXON STUNS PARTY with his nominee for vice president. Impossible not to connect Agnew'’s speech of nomination for Nixon with his subse- quent tapping for vice president. STOCK MARKET DOWN. ACCEPTANCE SPEECH follows brief revolt on the floor, poorly organized. : STRAW IN THE WIND, wild ovation for Mayor John Lindsay of New York, as he seconds nomi- nation for vice president. * x * 2. August 9: POSTAL STRIKE in Canada over after three weeks. : REPUBLICAN CONVENTION over, Miami Beach convention hall littered with popped balloons and trampled placards. EISENHOWER IMPROVING. : ; NIXON WON'T GO to Moscow. Will see LBJ short- ly to be briefed, at ranch. MILITANT BLACKS ARRESTED in Los Angeles disturbance. ; U.S. PATROL BOATS fire second time Mekong Delta village. TITO IN PRAGUE. * * on friendly * August 10: HUMPHREY CAMPAIGNS IN TEXAS, Mec- Carthy in California. SPONTANEOUS WELCOME for Tito in Czecho- slovakia, showing support for Czechs after recent confrontation with the Soviet. ‘RELEASE OF PUEBLO still a long way off. LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS, 100 blocks sealed off after Friday night's disorders. RAINSTORM AND CURFEW contribute to peace in Miami. * * * Weekend: McGOVERN ANNOUNCES presidential aspira- tions, appears on Meet The Press. OUTBREAK IN WATTS, three killed, several wounded, anniversary @f riot three years ago.| = GOVERNOR MADDOX of Georgia, is considering running for president. FRANTIC PREPARATIONS for Democratic Con- vention in Chicago Arena, in spite of strikes and threatened strikes. * * * August 12: GENERAL EISENHOWER off critical list. Long convalescence at Walter Reed in prospect. SYRIAN PILOTS, two planes, off course, land in Israel. Great consternation. OHIO DEMOCRATIC DELEGATES predict over- whelming victory for Humphrey. U. S. AND SOUTH VIETNAMESE make sweep in Mekong Delta fields. * * * August 13: FOURTH HURRICANE, Dolly, forming in mid-Atlantic. WATTS QUIET under saturation policing. BOMBERS STRIKE within two miles of Cambo- dian border. EAST GERMAN ENVOY leaves Czechoslovakia after silent treatment. BIAFRA HUNGER CRISIS, many children starv- ing, Nigerians blockade air approach as well as relief by road. Biafra said to have oil potential that would overshadow that of the Near East. CZECHS CLOSE DOORS to soapbox oratory, haul in their horns. HOUSTON TRANSPLANT PATIENT back to work. * x: © * August 14: SOCIAL SECURITY 33 years old. RED CROSS mav be able to get food to Biafra. ISRAEL NOT ABOUT TO release two pilots and planes until Israeli plane and crew are released Algeria. * * * Rnother Recreation Park in Prospect, In Pursnance Of Flood Control | metropolitan Scranton area is be- | ing proposed for Tunkhannock State | area. Park, one of a number of dams | under advisement. Sealed bids for the Tunkhannock project will be received by the De- partment, of Forests until 2 p.m. on September 19, when they will read. Di, Maurice K. Goddard heads | the department. Much opposition has developed | to further damming of the tribu-| taries River. The come-back to this is that | in the spring during freshet season, | water is Alcan Highway in| ground inundated. The program is seen as a flood | Blue Ridge Chapter, FFA, goes | control measure as well as a plan- ned recreation project. Located on the South Branch | Tunkhannock Creek, from Wellsville, the dam will im- | pound. a reservoir with a surface | area of 209 acres. It will have a| | shoreline of over seven miles and | a maximum depth of 38 feet. The lying in politics is understandable;” stream at the dam site has a drain- | gem gleaned from Republican Con- age area of 45 square miles, A recreation dam to serve the | be the nucleus of a new state park | to serve the Scranton metropolitan Damming of the creek on Carver- ton Road has resulted in a State Park which is affording recreation close to a metropolitan area for residents of Wyoming Valley. It is expected to hold back flood waters which have heretofore torn | down through level lands along the river and caused extensive damage. and Waters be - publicly opened and The lake thus created at Frances Slocum Park has not yet reached its full extent. It ‘has already pro- vided a wide variety of water sports, and the acreage has become a mecca for picnickers. The approaches to the Park are | not yet satisfactory from the stand- point ‘of the Back Mountain, but completely feasible for visitors | travelling up from Wyoming and Exeter, the main entrance within easy driving distance. The road from Dallas is danger- ously curved and narrow. feeding the Susquehanna wasted and low-lying downstream “A reasonable tolerance of honest -ventian.commentary over TV, David rber to Leroy E. Butler: {~The lake created by the dam will | Brinkley. 1 4 wa i | 4 Oak Wilt Attacking | 100-Year-Old Trees | Qak trees of the area are falling | prey to a virus, presumably carried | by an insect which burrows into | the tree, and spreads Oak Wilt. E. V. Chadwick, head of Luzerne | County Agricultural Extension Serv- ice, says that Penn State and Harris- | burg labcratories are doing {frantic | research to discover a. biological | | answer to the problem. In this area, many oak trees of great girth and age are dead gn | Bunker Hill," and residents are not- | ag that ‘their big oak frees are | suddenly dying. Many trees which leaved out fully this spring, are now shcwing droop- | SE Eall | vances, clear evidence that there | 5° something | | ng brown foliage, well in advancc | Oaks are ‘among the last | .0 turn ‘color as the ad- season radically wrong. Many sturdy oak teees are drop- | ping their limbs, the heart wood destrcyed by the wirus. To date, no remedy has been dis- covered. Mr. Chadw ck promises in- formation as. soon as anything definite ' is ‘ava’lable. Library Story Hour Draws Many Children Twenty to ; thirty pre-school | children congregate on Wednesday | morning at the. Back Mountain | Memorial Library to enjoy a story (hour conducted by Mrs. William Downs. The Story Hour is not new. It drew good attendance all winter, but nobody was able to foresee what an attraction it would be dur- ing the summer months. It is ticking right along, every week, to the delight of small chil- dren. The hour starts at 10:15. Safety Valve THEY MISSED THE PAPER August 5, 1968 Dear Dallas Post, Thank you very much for being 50 prompt with our copy of the Dallas Post. My husband and I have been liv- ng in Southeran California for 4% years. Up until last Christmas a gift of the Post, for one year, had oeen sent to us by my husband’s grandmether, Mrs. Harry Allen, who still lives at Harveys Lake. Last year she surprised us with 1. ‘more personal gift. We never ealized how very much we would niss the paper and all the local ews. Zo we decided to give our- | selves “ar Christmas present six DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Froqm— nonths early! { We enjoy, very much reading wews of old friends and current :appenings. It makes us feel we're still ‘a part of a community we'll | dways call “Home.” Thank you again. Sincerely yours Six Scouts Receive Jrder Of The Arrow George Marstell, Jr., John Porter, | Tom Wallace, Harry Swepston, Charles Roberts and William Fred- erick, Jr., received Order of the Arrow Awards at Camp Acahela ceremonies when members of Boy | Scout Troop 231, Shavertown, spent | the week there. | merit badges and Headed by Scoutmaster William Frederick and assisted by George Marstell, Sr., the boys earned 24 worked on 1st | and 2nd Class Advancements dur- | ing the week of July 28 to August | | | | 3. In attendance were George Marstell, Jr., Daniel Williams, Rob- ert Sprau, Wayne Devine, Ernest Ashbridge, Bill Tippett, Warren and Jeff Boyes, Eyre Price, John Por- ter, Wayne Frederick, Harry Swep- ston, Buddy Frederick, Fred Daniels, Charles Roberts, David Munnell, Mark Kloeber, Daniel MacAvory, William Ostrum, George Broody, Richard Bridle, Tom Wallace and Richard Showers. Pennsylvania Peach Crop Bounces Back This Year After a bad season last year the Pennsylvania peach crop is bouncing | back. | U. S. Department of Agriculture | estimates for 1968 put the state's | prcjected harvest at more than two | million bushels. Last year it was | only 800,000 bushels. Although Pennsylvania boasts a | good producing season for fresh | peaches with orchards bearing from | early July through September, now | is the peak of the season. Buyers representing Howard John- | Mr. Murphy spoke to the young son's, the coast-to-coast chain of | men and women about the Penn 825 restaurants, are selecting their | State Commonwealth Campus Sys- entire year’s supply now. The res- tem, requirements for admission to taurant chain buys U. S. Govern- ment Grade A fruit which is frozen or canned until needed. Hugh Kelly, director of purchas- ing for Howard Johnson's, said that about 150,000 pounds of eastern grown peaches are used for ice cream alone. Additional tons go into toppings and pies. Last year’s low yield was reflected | across the nation. National produc- | tion was down to less than 56 mil- lion bushels. This year’s crop will be close to 76 million bushels. Subscribe to THE DALEAS POST — IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE — — READ THE TRADING POST — | Auction late Saturday afternoon, in the midst of serving of the chicken barbecue supper, but the crew car- ried on, the barbecued chicken was | not limited to the Scout troop. delivered to the big dinner tent on Susan Besteder, 16, dared anybedy schedule, and the home-cooked meal to hit the paddle which releascd was served to a capacity crowd. 1480 halves of chicken were broiled | on the open pits, presided over by | Chief Ted Dymond. On order were | 1400 halves, but demand was high, and 80 more were ordered. A few | lucky people were able to buy them hot and savory from the grill, when | diners left to join the bidding. caused bidders to raise umbrellas, | but in fifteen minutes the skies merchandise, cleared streak Blankets came out to cover the wet : mometers planks, and folks dashed for their cars to find sweaters. Upward Bound and Barre Campus of the Pennsylvanic State University at Hayfield re- cently as part of the Wyoming | Valley’s Upward Bound Program. miliarize students with the opera- tion and activities of colleges and | to_spark their incentive to further their educations. new engineering building at the Mrs. Allen F. Swanson Brisk Shower Pillar To Post... by HIX That short-lived cold wave was right on schedule Saturday night. We always get it somewhere between the 8th and 12th of August, and another one along about the 25th. Then it's: guaranteed to steam up again, and the first day of school is always a sizzling occasion. ' a Fhe “weather pattern changes very little over the years. Ln advantage of keeping a House Book is that you can leaf ‘back to five years ago and find the same old pattern year after year. Ralph Rood used to keep a daily record of temperatures and weather, the amount of rainfall, and notes on the turning of the first leaf. He could ‘recite chapter and verse, and did so, with prac- tically no provocation. I don’t pretend to have that much detailed information, but there ‘are certain predictions which lie well within the realm of probability. : ; : Four weeks from today, we'll be wondering if maybe we shouldn't’ turn up the thermostat. It’s warm in the middle of the day, but those chilly mornings are something else. And in the eve- ning, a cozy little blaze in the fireplace is a pleasant thing to look at. Six weeks from today, people will wonder where that sudden little gust of ‘snow: ‘came’ from. It's the first time: in History that a snowflake dared to fall so‘éarly. : : And two months from now, everyday occurrence, We'll be’ wondering if Daylight Saving will ever end, as we grope our way out of bed in the morning in the dark. And the morn- ing sun will begin streaming into the southeast windows, gaining more and more as the leaves fall. Already there has been that first breath of fall, last Saty day night when the rain clouds rolled back after spilling far too Itle rain, and the clear green streak appeared in. the sunset sky. It smelled like fall. You could almost scent the woodsy smoke of burning leaves, and see the maples turning to red and gold. : The goldenrod is in full bloom, the hardy hydrangeas are be- ginning to turn faintly pink at the blossom tips, and there is ffady a scarlet flame of wayside sapling. There’s that odd little blue flower that always comes in the fall, and already the robins are training their last brood of fledglings to take care of themselves, ready for the southern flight. There's a stir in the air, in spite of the returning heat, that says the dog-days will soon he over. You can scent the fall, just as you can scent, on some prema- turely mild day in January, the coming spring. The Procession of Equinoxes is unfurling its banners, and the inexorable cycle of the changing seasons‘is under way. ! We tend to forget, from year to year, what is coming as the sun creeps farther and farther south. Weather and scason-wise people know the exact moment at which the sun will light up one small spot in a corner of the kitchen, and from that time forth, light it no more until another season brings it back to that spot. They know the exact place in which the full moon will rise, and where’ it will set. They know that the place changes with the ‘seasons, and that the winter moon is far more beautiful than the summer moon, casting inky shadows under the pine trees, and crossing the sky with deliberation instead of with unseemly haste. People who understand the seasons are blessed with a perception of the awesomeness of nature, denied to those who close their inner eyes. ! ‘It is: time now to: look forward to the first orange crocus, the first daffodil, the blaze of scarlet tulips, the budding of the dog od trees, the first arbutus. And hefore that, the long winter sleep of the countryside, 9: bulbs and seeds awaiting the stir of life under the snow. frost on the windshield will be an \ * * * A deluge caught Center Moreland the high diving tank, | the trap, In the two nights of the Auction, | also risked a bath. Mrs. Moreland. A few more short gusts of rain Mr. and Mrs. Robert Phillips. were still on hand. The continued Monday night, with registering in a the welcome green | the west. | and appeared in | shoulders and blankets The heat wave was over. | around the knees. ‘Chilled youngsters shivered above | Thirty-two high school juniors seniors visited. the = Wilkes- The program is intended to fa-| Drafting and Design Administration. Mr. Fred Kolls, The students assembled in the Hayfield Campus and were ad- | trating the surveying curriculum | dressed by Dean John R. Murphy. | offered by the college. The students then toured the Campus, viewing the engineering building, the Hayfield House, and the student center. 42nd St., Idetown, has been pre- sented e i | Achievement Award by Ohio Far- mers Insurance Group of LeRoy, Ohio. drew J. Dawson, Manager of the Harrisburg Service Office in Penn- sylvania “at a special recognition meeting held recently. ) Local Insurance Agency Presented With Award Award in the Eastern Branch. Hartman Insurance Agency, West ] quality customer the bronze President's agement, and performance. their professional service . . . This award was presented by An- protection of their customers. tertman FOR QUALITY PRINTING Insurance Agency was. one’ of “only. . OFFSET OR LETTERPRESS 22 select insurance agencies to earn THE DALLAS POST Ghia J LE LS £ ay, : Sy Fails To Dampen Fun 0f Crowd At Center Moreland Sale waiting to be dunked. This is an annual project of the Center Moreland Boy Scouts, but the kids in bathing suits were and Jackie Schoonover The star attraction of the auction, a 1968 Oldsmobile, was bid in by Ruth Howell of Coco Beach, Florida, in ‘the area on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Verna Gay of Center The freezer, on consignment from | Boyd White, was knocked do to At closing time, many articles of both used and new, Auggion er- range which required sweaters over the wrapped Students Make Tour the Wilkes-Barre Campus, and the availability of financial aid for in- coming freshmen. He also listed the associate degree programs offered by the College, which include Elec- trical and Electronics Technology, Technology, Surveying Technology, and Business Following Dean Murphy's talk, President of the Student Government Association at the Campus, narrated a film illus- the. coveted President’ Achiov ln: Hartman Insurance Agency re- ceived the bronze award in recog- nition of their efforts to maintain service ‘through effective insurance planning, man- Ohio Farmers also cited the agency for and their dedication to the complete
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers