The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 02, 1970, Image 5

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    two area men promoted
at First National Bank
Thomas H. Kiley, president of
The First National Bank of
Wilkes-Barre, announced that
two residents of the Back Moun-
tain Area were promoted on the
bank’s official staff. Robert D.
Richardson, manager of the
bank’s Dallas Village Office,
was promoted to assistant
cashier and in the trust depart-
ment, William R. Phillips was
named assistant secretary.
Mr. Richardson, was gradu-
ated from Dickinson College in
Carlisle, where he received a B.
A. degree with a major in eco-
nomics. He served in the Army
as a second lieutenant and is
presently on the Command Staff
of the, 502 Military Police Pris-
oner@ War Reserve Unit with
the rank of captain.
Prior to joining the First Na-
tional Bank staff, Mr. Richard-
son was associated with his
father in L.L. Richardson
Dodge Agency. He is active in
community affairs and is
serving as the chairman of the
‘Back Mountain Memorial
Library Auction, vice president
of the Dallas Fire Department,
and is a member of Dallas
Rotary Club. He is a member of
the auditing committee of the
Dallas Methodist Church, and a
member of the Reserve Officers
Association of United States.
Mh dm is married
and lies with his wife, Sandra,
and their two sons, Robert Jr.
Robert D. Richardson
and Mark, at 25 Monroe Ave.,
Dallas.
» Mr. Phillips was graduated
from Penn State where he re-
ceived a B.S. degree in Indus-
trial Psychology and he at-
tended the University of Virgin-
ia, University of Maryland, and
Bloomsburg State College. He is
presently attending the Penn-
sylvania Bankers Association
Turst School at Bucknell. He
served nine years in the Marine
Corps., one year of which
service he spent in Vietnam. At
the time of his discharge from
2'Dallas girls held
after arrest in raid
Two Dallas girls, Michelle
Witek 18, 95 Parrish St., and
Roseann Novrosky 18, 62 Joseph
St., have been charged with
possession and control of
narcotics following a raid, June
25, in Wilkes-Barre.
Wilkes-Barre police also
arrested six young men and a
juvenile along with the two
Dallas girls in an apartment at
65 N. Washington St. All were
charged with being in violation
of the Dangerous Drug, Device
and Cosmetic Act.
Following a search of the
Apartygent that had been under
the
by Philip Fitelson
This writer is deviating from
the stock market analyisis this
week but not from The Money
Game. Because the needs for
new roads in Mountaintop area
are so imperative, and because
they effect the economy of the
Mountaintop area, there is a
golden opportunity to come out
on top if the officials follow
through with the following in-
formation; !
The Pennsylvania Depart-
ment of Highways is conducting
a highway functional classifica-
tion and needs study at the re-
quest of the United States
Bureau of Public Roads. As part
of thegNational Highway Func-
surveilance for a period of time,
the youths were arraigned
before Dist. Magistrate John
Bednarz, North Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Bail was set at
$7,000 each.
Miss Witek and Miss
Novrosky were remanded in de-
fault of bail to the county
women’s detention home. A
check by The Post late Monday
afternoon revealed that the two
teenage girls had still not raised
bail and were still in custody at
the detention home. A hearing
will be held July 1.
William R. Phillips
ol.
the Marines, he held the rank of
first lieutenant. Following his
military career, Mr. Phillips
was associated with the First
National Bank of Milton and he
was also an assistant bank ex-
aminer with the Federal Re-
serve Bank of Philadelphia. He
joined the executive staff of the
First National Bank of Wilkes-
" Barre’s Trust Department in
August, 1969.
Mr. Phillips resides with his
wife, Peggy, a daughter, Kelly,
and a son, William Randolph II,
at 32 Spring St., Shavertown.
Larry Gibson
receives promotion
Larry P. Gibson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence P. Gibson,
844 Middletown Road, Hershey,
has been promoted to staff
sergeant in the Air Force.
Sgt. Gibson, a radio repair-
man, is assigned at San Vito Dei
Normanni Air Station, Italy. He
is in the 15th Communications
Squadron, a unit of the Aero-
space Defense Command which
protects the United States
against hostile aircraft and
missiles.
The sergeant is a 1965
graduate of Hershey High
School. His wife, Margaret, is
the daughter of Edmund
Yankoski, RD 2, Dallas.
money game
The following meeting, open
to officials of all political sub-
divisions of the Commonwealth,
has been scheduled to provide a
forum to solicit the review of
1990 population and urban limit
estimates and preliminary
highway functional classifica-
tion systems.
The meeting will be held July
+7, 1970 at 10:00 a.m. at the
tional Yolassification and Needs :
Study (1970-1990), all roads and
streets in the Commonwealth
will be considered in the deter-
mination of road use and im-
proveagent costs expected to
accure by the year 1990.
Pennsylvania Department of
Highways District 4-0 office at
Dunmore, and includes the
counties of Bradford, Lacka-
wanna, Luzerne, Pike, Susque-
hanna, Wayne and Wyoming.
Additional meetings will be
held to include all remaining
areas of the State. It is re-
quested that those persons plan-
ning to attend notify the Munici-
pal Services Unit of their re-
spective Department of High-
ways District. For those offici-
als interested in reviewing their
area but unable to attend the
A “STERLING” IDEA
FOR THE 4TH OF JULY!
MAKE UP A PARTY
Enjoy Sterling Hotel’s Award-winning
MORGASBORD
PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH STYLE
More than 100 varieties of Fine Foods and Desserts.
: wi you can eat. No charge for seconds, thirds, or
“fourths. Make your own sundae.
Every Thursday—>5 to 8:30 P.M.
Every Saturday—o5 to 9:30 P.M.
Every Sunday—
12 Noon to 8 P.M.
Free parking
For Reservations *
Call: 822-3131
be
By Tradition
Wilkes-Barre’s Finest!
Downtown Motor Hotel. On the River Common
scheduled meeting, the maps
and statistics will be available
in the appropriate District
office for a period of two weeks
following the District meeting.
A new road is needed between
Route 81 at Naungola and the
Crestwood Industrial Park— a
new road is needed from
Boyle’s Pond in Rice Township
to Route 309 with exit on 309
near the White Spot Custard
Stand—and a new widening of
road is needed on the Old
Hazelton Highway from the
Triangle to Route 309 exit below
Dementi’s with a program to
straighten out the twists and
turns on this old Pinchot road.
With a good road building
program in the Mountaintop
area the economy and growth
would be greater and larger.
oo
THE DALLAS POST, JULY. 2,1970
more members
for ham 'n yeggs
Many more have joined the
ranks of the Ham ’n Yegg Club
for the Back Mountain Mem-
orial Library Auction since last
week’s edition of The Dallas
Post. Bill Moss, who heads the
membership drive, has sub-
mitted the following list of new
members:
Ervin L. Conner,
rest J. Burns, E. C. Henninger,
Agnes Gregson, John M. Coon,
Charles D. Lemmond Jr., David
Schooley, Harold C. Snowdon,
Victoria J. Salansky, Richard
Maslow, Wm. A. Woolbert, J.
Frederick Sallada, Harold E. |
Flack, Thomas C. Stegner,
Charles L. Levy, Bernard L.
Balz, M. Reginald Beck Jr.,
Granville F. Miller, Irwin D.
Kistler, Dr. Lester M. Saidman,
John Casner, Paul
Gerald T. John;
Helen J. Mailander, F. E.
Parkhurst III, Allan Roberts,
Samuel G. Spencer, Raymond
Daring, Ralph Fitch, Edwin S.
Hogg, Atty. Merton E. Jones,
John M. Savickas,
S-S., Arthur H. Dietze, A. H.
Runstall, George L. Ruckno,
Sam Davenport, Emerson M.
Perrine, Henry S. Orf, Dr. R. C.
Post, Arthur R. Dungey, Wil-
liam H. Johnson, Oliver D.
J.C.
LaBerge, F. J. Gager, Francis |
L. Ambrose, Mable E. Evans, |
Wm. G. Cooper, Henry H. Otto
Jr., James D. Hutchison, For- |
Daily, ©
Thomas |
Turner, Ed Delaney, Pete Berti *
Rome, Ralph Frances, John T.:
Mackenrow, Clarke Bittner,
Luzerne Nat’l. Bank, Royer
Foundry, U.S. Plywood, A.
Rifkin Co.
ROBERT N. HALLETT
& ASSOCIATES
18 Pierce Street
Kingston, Pa. 18704 288-9361
PENSION
and
PROFIT SHARING
PLANS
GROUP MEDICAL
and
LIFE INSURANCE
/ SHAFFER'S
PINK
APPLE
RESTAURANT
and
GIFT SHOP
Open Tuesday thru
Sunday 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
CLOSED MONDAYS
. Rte. 6 — Tunkhannock
836-2971
PAGE FIVE
Walter Mohr, past district governor, installed the new officers of
the Rotary Club of Dallas at the June 25 meeting at Irem Temple
Country Club. Left to right, are: Dr. Richard Post, director;
Harry McCartney, director; Earl Phillips, outgoing president;
Hanford Eckman, incoming president; Donald Evans, vice
president; Phillip VanBlarcom, secretary, and L. F. Kingsley,
treasurer. Other directors are Dr. Robert Mellman and Merton
Jones.
Ed me
FURNITURE GALLERIES
FEATURES
FURNITURE
OF
DISTINCTION
FOR
DISCRIMINATING
PEOPLE
Heritage
Hendredon
Drexel
Globe
TOWN & COUNTRY]
253 S. MAIN ST.
WILKES-BARRE
ol
FEATURES :
re
BR
AND
« VINYL ABOVEGROUND
« VINYL IN GROUND
« CONCRETE POOLS
ANY SIZE . ..
ANY SHAPE
PRESTIGE POOLS
STATUS SYMBOL OF WYOMING VALLEY
WYOMING VALLEYS LARGEST POOL BUILDER
Bank financing available
No Money Down.. 7 years to pay
RT. 31
across from Treadway Inn
MR. KLEEN POOLS
across from Forty Fort Airport
J =
TWO LOCATIONS
5 WILKES-BARRE, PA.
2000 WYOMING AVE.
TEL: 822-1188
United Fund arrives
at $1,465,000 goal
The Board of Directors and
Executive Committee of the
Wyoming Valley United Fund
met recently at the Fund
building for the purpose of ar-
riving at a campaign goal. A.
DeWitt Smith, president of the
United Fund, presided. Reports
were given of the Combined
Federal Campaign, the Central
Allocations Committee, and the
Administration and Finance
committee. After a short dis-
cussion, the assembled mem-
bers passed on the goal to be
sought in the 1970-71 campaign
for the Wyoming Valley United
Fund.
Edmund H. Poggie Jr., cam-
paign general chairman of this
year’s fund drive made the an-
nouncement of the goal. He
stated, “We are happy, after all
this study and soul searching, to
have set our Wyoming Valley
United Fund campaing goal for
1970-71, at $1,465,000.
‘Budget requests have been
gone over in great detail by the
Central Allocations Committee,
and then reduced to a bedrock
minimum. We have taken their
recommendation and have a
realistic goal. Demands from
the community are greater than
ever, and if we are to be proud
of our area, we must provide
these services.”
Mr. Poggi continued, ‘“We can
do this by cooperative effort of
all the volunteer workers, thou-
sands of them, and most im-
portantly, the thousands of con-
tributors, workers, corpora-
tions and all. There are so many
problems of the world today
that we can do little about. The
United Fund gives us one we
can immediately solve.
The fall campaign will begin
September 18.
~ Thebest
still come from
ton
But there're still a few buys around.
Here are just a few of them from Old Mr. Boston. Naturally.
Old No. Boston
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1/2 Gallon, Code #373, $9.71 1/2 Gallon, Code #487, $9.60
Pint, Code #486, $2.60
Pint, Code #320, $2.51
80 proof, 4/5 Quart
Code #319, $4.10
% Pint, Code #322, $1.30
J LLIN TOUS
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80 proof, 4/5 Quart
Code #1219, $4.99
80 proof, Quart
Code #488, $4.86
Whiskey
[LLCO LEY
TT TAT EATS |
4 years old, 80 proof,
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Code #1051, $4.33
80 proof} Quart
Code #1016, $4.99
Pint, Code #1032, $2.69
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Mr. BOSTo N
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THIS RUM 1S IMPORTED FROM THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
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80 proof, 4/5 Quart
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(light) Tenth, Code #1472, $2.28
STRAIGHT WHISKEYS
100 proof, 4/5 Quart, Code #1299, $5.47
80 proof, 4/5 Quart, Code #1217, $4.45
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Tenth, Code #416, $2.45
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Tenth, Code #370, $2.27
Orange Flavored Gin—70 proof, Tenth, Code #372, $2.27
Sloe Gin — 60 proof, 4/5 Quart, Code #335, $3.75
Tenth, Code #336, $1.88
Rock & Rye — 60 proof, 4/5 Quart, Code #523, $3.89
Lime Flavored Vodka — 70 proof, 4/5 Quart, Code #472, $3.99
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