CN Tie APN rT YIN YY Ye. EEE 0 000000000000 1700000000000. By — Sel — Swap — "Trade PHONE 674.5656 OR 674-7676 FOR SALE FOR SALE For sale. A Frigidaire refrig- erator, 9 cubic ft., automatic defrost. Phone 696-2205. standard condition. 1965 Mustang—6 cyl. shift. Excellent Phone 675-2592. Heatrola unit and 3 piece living room suit, both excellent con- dition. $20 each. 287-8936 after p-m. For sale: ‘‘My-Double’’ dress form. $20. Call 696-2207. 1965 Honda Scrambler, 305 cc. Motor good. $300 Call 696- ve Two new picture windows; one 4-9" high 7’ long; one 3'-4" high by 5-8" long. Both for $65. Call 675-1497, after 3 p.m. Former residence of Dr. Al- bert Blase, 162 Ferguson Ave., Shavertown. Directly behind the Acme Market. Saturday, April 19; hours 9-4. Motorcycle — 1966 Harley- Davidson 50 cc. Excellent condition, low mileage, trail sprocket included. $125.00. 15 Colonial Road (High Point Acres, off Elizabeth Street) Dallas. Phone 675-1575. Restaurant equipment for sale —cash register, 15 lunch counter stools (like new) steam table, 2 stainless steel storage and work tables. 639-1029. Sgarlat’s. Two 8.25-14 Snow tires, studded, tubeless, good condition. Two 825-14 regular tires with Heels. tubeless, good condi- tion. Two 8.25-14 snow tires, ts one season, excellent. Two 8.25-14 summer tires with wheels, excellent. Two 8.25- 14 tires, good. Call 675-5114. Fresh Holstein cows for sale. Phone 333-4525 after 6 p.m. 1967 Yamaha Twin Jet 100. A-1 condition $250.00. Phone 674-6197. Starter set of golf clubs, bag and cart included. Used very little. $80.00. Call 674-8797. Pony, 13lbhands high, eight years old, good disposition, can be ridden English or western. Child's English sad- dle and single rein bride. $200. Dumont 21" black and ae TV console with bow- e, $30. Call 675-3054. 1961 GMC 15, ton, 180 amp. Airco portable generator Ider, gas driven, 200 foot welding cable, complete gas welding, cutting, outfit. $950. Call 696-1852. Registered Jersey heifer, just fresh, with calf. Call 675-3093. Vacationers: Do you need a station wagon to pull your travel trailer? | have a 1968 International station wagon which pulled our trailer to California loaded, factory air, etc. Call 696-2952, Friday or Sunday evening. Spy apples, two grades, bring Wntainers. Harold Brace, range, Phone 333-4236. Wanted, responsible party to take over low monthly pay- ments on a spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write. Credit" Manager, P.O. Box 35, Cort- land, Ohio. Antiques Beautiful curly Maple secretary desk, china closets, small wooden ware, copper, brass, iron and tin items. Also expert furniture restoration. Major Antiques, 675-2991; one mile off Route 118 on Lehman Center-Hunts- ville Road. Remington Chain Saws (new and used) Rent a saw by day: or week. New Mur Alumi- num, Noxen Road, Harveys Lake. 639-5030. Corn planters, John Deere, two-row, 290. Manzoni Broth- ers. 675-2687. 1965 Chevrolet Impala, super- sports, power steering, new tires, good shape. Shift, four on the floor. 675-2534. Hay conveyor, 20 foot; belt conveyor, 18 foot. Manzoni Brothers’ 675-2687. John Deere-A tractor with two- bottom trip plow. Manzoni Brothers, 675-2687. Spring Special—Bamboo lawn rakes, 89 cents. White Ap- pliance and Furniture. Dallas 674-8181. Closeout Specials, Floor sam- ples, 3 piece Nelson living room suites. Two only, $549. value, while they last $295. White Appliance and Furni- ture. Dallas 674-8181. Rugs any size—all known makes. A little out of the way, but a lot less to pay. B. Carpet Edward Wallo 675-1454. Gas and Oil, Plumbing and Heat- ing, Deep well pumps: Monk Plumbing & Heating, 674-5816. Gas, oil, electric coal installations. No down- payment. Five years to pay Fuel Oils,Atlantic Products. .Meter service to insure you atcuracy. Montross Oit Com- pany, 436 Main Street. Luzerne. Phone Kingston 287-2361. William Eckert Lawnmower Sales and Service. Saws filed,’ lawnmowers sharpened, re paired. New and used mow ers; lawnmower parts. Whee Horse tractors. Call 674-5931. Wellington Avenue, off Route 309. MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE THE DALLAS POST, APRIL 17, 1969 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Man or woman—reliable person from this area to service and collect from automatic dis- pensers. No experience needed . we establish accounts for you. Car, references and $985 to $1785 cash capital neces sary. 4 to 12 hours weekly nets excellent monthly income. Full time more. For local interview, write, include telephone num- ber, Eagle Industries, 4725 E x- celsior Blvd., St. Louis Park, Minnesota. 55416. WORK WANTED Carpenter work, installation of wall-boards, finishing work, cabinet building. All kinds of carpentry. Call Alfred Hadsel, 639-5554. 1966 Mobile Home 12’ x 51’, two bedrooms, gun-type oil fur- nace, A-1 condition. For ap- pointment call Colonial Courts, Tunkhannock, 836-2331. WANTED TO BUY Guns and pistols any condition. Broody’s, 30 W. Main St., Plymouth. Phone 779-9579. WHOM TO CALL FREE New spring wardrobe for showing BEELINE FASHIONS Call Jeanne Hann 287-3822 KITCHEN CHAIRS i wanted as care-taker of Back That favorite chair or sofa re- Mountain home, two days a upholstered. Dallas Auto Seat Covers . 874-9521 Company, 267 South Main Street, Wilkes-Barre. Roto tillers, lawn mowers, chain saws. Welding. Gus Walters. 675-1869. Riding lawn mower; good con- dition; $75. Phone 587-1561 after 4 p.m. Dining room suite—china cab: inet, buffet, 4 chairs, square table. Also 1 big upholstered rocker in good condition; kitchen table; 1 floor model. Dumont TV; 1 floor model: Zenith radio. Call 587-3623. Girl’s pink spring coat. Size 10. Like new. $6. Phone 587-3428. Clean rugs, like new, so easy to do with Blue Lustre. Rent elec- tric shampooer $1. Bunnell Hardware, Clarks Summit, Pa. WHOM TO CALL Bud’s Electric. House Wiring, 2 or 3 wire service. Call 675- ° 2484. Need entertainment? Banquet, parties, meetings. Call Bruce Hopkins—Public speaking, comedy, monologues, hum- orous and dramatic readings. 675-1960 after 6 p.m. Income Tax Returns expertly prepared. Call Michael J. Stanley, 39 South Pioneer Avenue, Trucksville. Tele- phone 696-1041. Sweepers, small appliances, lamps, tools, radios etc. re- paired. Don’t throw them away! It pays to have them fixed! 113 E. Center St. Shavertown, 675-1580 daily 9- 12 and 5-8, Saturday 1-7. Painting, roofing, brick point- ing and water-proofing.. Call 675-5638. Antiques and furniture refin- ished, reconditioned. Call Ste- fan Hellersperk 675-1690. Rurat Upholstery, Sweet Valley, RD 1, Free Estimates. Call 477-5711. is your truck, tractor or auto- mobile using 0il? Your mech- anic or garage will recom- mend SEALED POWER guar- anteed piston rings. Complete machine shop. Stull Brothers, Kingston. For rent-Trucks, travel trailers, truck campers. Camper mounted on a pick-up truck. Reese Motors, Memorial High- | way, Dallas. 675-2951, J Handyman, general mainte- nance, home repairs (painting, plumbing, carpentry). Full or i estimates. ‘i§ part-time. Free Call 639-1335." - THOMAS P. GARRITY Realtor Real Estate & Instrance Service to thé Greater Back Mt. "Area HARVEYS LAKE 639-1191 Pole 89 — Harveys Lake "Ralph Fitch .& Sons Plumbing and ‘Heating . GAS -~OIL - COAL, Deep and Shallow Well’ Pumps; { DALLAS — 674-8811 Factory-authorized Parts: Bales & Service—Used Appliances | - REBENNACK APPLIANCE CO. 267 Wyoming Ave. Kingsten 281-1174 TIE 0 TE Paperhanging MIKE POSTUPACK "Phone 825-3297 or 825-2077 WATER PUMP SALES AND SERVICE Tanks-Switches-Pipes | Softeners-Chlorination, Etc. R. W. WEIDNER Du | nei i —————"! ro Paving Driveways Crushed Stone “Meeting Pa. Dept. of ||: Highway Specifications.” 2 American Asphalt Paving Co. 696-1114 [Plant and Quarry — — : Ik Complete: line of modern parking Areas i | HELP WANTED "1 House, Mechanic, Banks Equipment Co., Inc. Call for appointment: Mr. Campbell, 696-1114. An equal opportunity employer. Man wanted for roofing and siding work. Experience pre- ferred but not necessary. Telephone 696-1623 after 4:30. Sell Cemetery Memorials. No investment. We deliver. Free sales kit. Wenz Co., Inc., Allentown, Pa. Girls and women for summer work at Sandy Beach Drive In Theatre. evening after 6 p.m. at the cafeteria. Mature, dependable man week during summer months. Call after 6 p.m. 823-6282. Men for general outside work. 40 hours per week. Jewish Community Center, l|detown. Jos. Niezgoda, Supt. Part-time cook needed at Park Motel, two miles north of Route 309 in Trucksville on Carverton Road. Hours, Fri- days, Saturdays, 5 to 12 p.m. Sundays 10 to 5 p.m. Apply Friday . SANITARY SERVICE Septic Tanks, reinforced con- crete, buy the best. Costs less in the long run. C. E. German and Son, Kingston, 282-1448 or your local supply dealer. Ralph Fitch & Sons TOP SOIL - STONE. FILL DALLAS ~— 674.8811 HOFFMAN GENERAL CONTRACTOR Aluminum Siding, Carpentry, Painting, Roofing FREE ESTIMATES 388-6564 ; | Metered Bulk or Bottled Gas “LP - Gas Motor Fuel and Carburetion Equipment . GAS APPLIANCES —Space Heating—- Contractors— Salamander “Gas Service An For: ‘Service;€all 822-1937 Sans Souci Parkway ‘Wilkes-Barre 2 Bn RCA. "COLOR ALL MAKES BLACK AND WHITE TV - RADIOS ~ HI-FI David W. Sizemore § ‘BEAUMONT, PA. oR GVER CLEANERS Lens R-1. Septic Tanks’ Cleaned « Installed Service v: | REAL ESTATE On Carpenter Road, Cease Street, Harveys Lake, house six rooms and bath, gas heat, own ‘well, year round home call 639-5445. FOR RENT Storage Rooms for rent, first or second floor. Short or long term lease. Phone 675-1934. Office space for rent. Central Dallas, Main Street, over Sneak-A-Snack. Room and one-half, heat included. Good for Beauty Shop, Attorney, etc. Call 639-1110. ROOMS FOR RENT Furnished rooms, day, week or month. Maid service. Kingston 947 Market Street, Kingston. Phone 288-4525. WANTED TO RENT Two adults desire apartment to rent in Dallas, Shavertown, Trucksville areas. Below $100. Call 674-7538. Wanted: Room and Board for middle-aged man in Back Mountain area. Call 675-5810. LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that Michael Sholtis of 46 Warner St., Plains, Penna., and Frank D. Thomas of 169 Main St., Laflin, Pa., will file in the office of the secretary of the Com- monwealth of Pa. and pro- "thonotary of Luzerne County on April 7, 1969, an application to do business under the fictitious name of Kleer-Vu Antenna Company at 169 Main St. Laflin, Pa. Francis P. Burns, Esq. 1015 Miners National Bank Bldg., Wilkes-Barre LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Dallas Township Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing at 7:30 P.M. Tuesday, “May 6, 1969 at Dallas Junior High School, to consider the application of Suburban Con- struction Co., to rezone their development, Fenwood Park, on Upper Demunds Road in Dallas Township, from A-1 to DALLAS TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS Glenn M. Howell, Sec.-Treas. ONE HOUR TV SER- VICE. BLACK-WHITE $2.75; ‘COLOR PICTURE TUBE INSTALLED IN HOME $150. 675-2023. reading confab here Returning to College Miseri- cordia, her alma mater, as a leader in the 10th annual read- ing-education conference April 18 and 19, will be Sister Mau- reen Gaffney, RSM. Along with Sister Monica Marie Reichmuth, RSM, she will take part in a demonstra- tion in special education, ‘The Neurologically Impaired Child —Characteristics and Educa- tion.” Both nuns teach at the St. Maurice Day School in Poto- mac, Md. COLOR $5. 25" audience shocked by not being shocked The audience at Dallas Senior High School Thursday night simmered uneasily as Dr. Steven Homel introduced his topic, “Sex and Narcotics.” One woman expressed it in an undertone, “I'm afraid I'll hear something I don’t want to hear. Maybe I shouldn’t have come.” A neighbor suggested, “Well, what did you come for? Noth- ing is keeping you here, you can always get up and leave.” Members of the Rotary, Ki- wanis, and Lions service clubs accepted an invitation to ‘‘come on down front and fill the empty seats,” filing in sheepishly to take their places, an assem- blage of# solid citizens, leading clerics, and businessmen. Dr. Homel started to speak, employing’ techniques common to group therapy work, talking to his listeners and persuading them to talk back. He brushed off the narcotics angle with a few deft strokes, and concentrated on sex, the bait which had drawn a capac- ity crowd. \ As Dr. Robert Mellman, su- perintendent of Dallas schools, expressed it later, ‘They came to be shocked, expected to be shocked and were disappointed when they weren't shocked. They were anticipating blue prints.” How to tell ALL? Dr. Homel gathered the audi- ence into the fold with an adroit approach, operating, not from the rostrum, but from the floor, confronting people with the microphone, and hypnotizing them into speaking their minds and posing questions. With the expertise of an old hand at the game of guiding an audience, he got just exactly what he wanted, without forcing an issue. “Now, you are in the sixth grade at school. Think of the questions that you could have asked in the sixth grade. John, you're a sixth grader. ‘‘And now, you're in kinder- garten. You're asking where babies come from. How do they get there? You've been told a lot of things. Do you believe them? What does your mother tell you? ,‘And_now, youre big boys and girls. You want to know what's wrong with having sex relations.” What developed, through dia- logue with the audience, was that children are by nature imitative; that the atmosphere of the home is all important for setting the stage for acceptable human relations; that with ex- panding horizons and greater contact with the larger world as distinguished from the secure home nest, children begin ask- ing themselves, “What am I?” Sex education, Dr. Homel said, means many things to many people. To some, it is family plan- ning, instructing children in the meaning of life from the age of three up through adolescence, warning against venereal dis- ease, againstpregnancy, against taking advantage of another human being. To some, it words. To some, it is something to sweep under the rug. Don’t look at it, and it will go away. Many parents do not have the words, and many children can- not understand the words, lis- tening with apparent intentness, but with completely closed minds, so that the information rolls over them, and the tide recedes, leaving the sand as dry as it was before. Puppy love? Does the puppy know he’s a puppy? Never. He thinks he is completely adult, and he knows all the answers. Smoking, reckless driving, drinking, are all symbols of a growing urge to become adult is four-letter INIT k TABLETS ASS at 2 GSA for relref of discomiort in HAVE Fru ALLERGIC RHINITIS, SIMPLE HIVES To Combat Discomfort in Hay Fever, Pollen Allergies, Simple Hives Hall's Pharmac "The Largest Pharmacy In The Back Mt. Area" Open daily and Sun. 8a.m.~10 p.m. (98 hrs. ) Jd Fedock; R.P. Shavertown, Pa. FRR —— EW. Hell, RP... .L. J. Eltiott, R.P. 674-9161 divin dnd Ato no EE GR overnight, and indiscriminate sex is on the same loading plat- form. People who used to deplore the double standard find that imperceptibly the standards for behavior in boys and girls are converging rapidly upon one single standard. The drawback, physiologi- cally speaking, is that the girl has a larger stake in indiscrimi- nate intercourse than the boy does. Dr. Homel pointed out that there are 350,000 teen-age preg- nancies in the country each year. If the abortionist doesn’t intervene, or there is no mis- carriage, that adds up to 350,- 000 births. What is abortion? What is miscarriage? What is the chance for dis- ease? What about penicillin? All children, Dr. Homel pointed out, have access to in- formation. If the information is not avail- able in the home, if parents are tongue-tied and feel incapable of answering questions, the responsibility devolves upon the school or upon the church. Children will find out what they need to know. If they do not find it through the usual channels, they will find it else? where. *Sex, as sex, ‘is simply a part of the entire gamut of human behavior, the wish to be one of the gang, the shrinking from being different and therefore labelled as a square. To experiment with mari- juana in the belief that it will give ‘‘reality,”’ Dr. Homel ex- plained; is a sheer fantasy, and the same applies to experi- mentation with sex. Who am I? What can influ- ence me? What can I do to con- trol my emotions? Do I have to be like everybody else? Why? These are the questions. High pressures take over in the adolescent years. One drop too much, and there goes the cork. It isn’t the one added drop, it’s the whole seething mass. Like drop-outs. Drop- outs don’t occur suddenly’in the tenth grade, the foundation for dropping out has been laid in the third grade. Dr. Homel spent the following day at Dallas schools, speaking to grades in the auditorium all day, and the faculty after school dismissal. Instruction to parents was, “Stay away.” Instruction to preachers was, “Get lost. Sit in the back of the auditorium, and don’t open your heads.” Director Earl Fritsges’ com- ment was, “We've got to get this man back again.” Principal Thomas Jenkins summed it up: ‘“Where’s he been all these years? This is what we've been needing. 1 heard him down in Harrisburg, and I was sold solid three min- utes after he started speaking. He's got the most common sense approach to human rela- tions of anybody I've ever heard. He’s talking about people and he’s talking to peo- ple, and he gets through to people. PAGE THIRTEEN Professional Engineer Robert Doyle, left, and Don Smith, chairman of NSPE’s legislative and government affairs com- mittee, visit the Capitol. Dallas man returns from Washington Don Smith, Country Club Road, Dallas, recently returned from Washington, D.C., where he met with federal and state legislators to discuss programs involving the engineering pro- fession. Mr. Smith, senior partner of Smith, Miller and Associates, Kingston, consulting engineers, serves as chairman of the Na- tional Society of Professional Engineers in the legislative and government affairs committee. He is past president of Penn- sylvania Society of Engineers, and a past national director of the Society. : While in Washington, Mr. Smith was headquartered at the = National Society of Professional Engineers Building, which he designed. Locally, Mr. Smith designed the Dallas Junior High School, now in construction, Lake-Leh- "man High School, and renova- tions at Penn-State’s Wilkes- Barre campus, Hayfield House. Mr. Smith’s wife, Mildred, is president of the Pennsylvania gineers. McDermott in Vietnam With U.S. Combat Air Forces, Vietnam, Sgt. Mark D. Mec- Dermott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. McDermott of RD 4, Dallas, is on duty at De Nang AB, Vietnam. Sgt. McDermott, a communi- cation equipment repairman is a member of the Air Force Communications Service in sup- port of the Pacific Air Forces. Before his arrival in Vietnam, he was assigned to Fuchu Air Station, Japan. The sergeant is a graduate of Lake-Lehman High School. ROUTE NO. Build your own barbecue, walkway, patio, steps, etc., and save when you use Corson’s HOME-CRETE cement and mortar mixes. You'll get professional results every time, and you'll be amazed at how easy it is! And when you stop in, ask for your free copy of the 24-page HOME-CRETE Handbook, the easy-to-follow guide to do-it-yourself cement work. WHITESELL BROS. BUILDING SUPPLIES PHONE 674-1671 BOX 127, DALLAS, PA. ONE MILE WEST OF DALLAS 118 LEHMAN HIGHWAY USE WHITESELL BROS. BILD-ACCOUNT . Convenient Credit Terms (RETE’ MORTAR MIX GRAVEL MIX SAND MIX Ready-To-Use with NO DRY MIXING — Just Add Water | FREE DELIVERY — OPEN SATURDAY he : a EE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers